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Haris is a male given name. The name Haris has two origins: Arabic and Greek. In Arabic, it is derived from the Arabic name Harith (حارث), [1] which means "guardian angel." In Greek, Haris is a forename, or given mythological Greek name, which means "grace". [2] In the Balkans, Haris is popular among Bosniaks in the former Yugoslav nations. [3]
Camp is an English surname taken from Latin roots. The name is found in Great Britain and in other places throughout the world settled by the English. According to the 2000 census there are fewer than 1300 Camps in the UK. [1] The 2000 US census puts the number at over 27,000, making it the 1087th most common name in America, after McDermott. [2]
The meaning and origin of name of Latvian people is unclear, however the root lat-/let- is associated with several Baltic hydronyms and might share common origin with the Liet-part of neighbouring Lithuania (Lietuva, see below) and name of Latgalians – one of the Baltic tribes that are considered ancestors of modern Latvian people.
Haris (given name), including a list of people; Haris (surname), a list of people; Haris Alagic, stage name Haris, Dutch singer-songwriter and guitarist; Haris (caste), people of indigenous origin found in the Indian state of West Bengal
Harris is an English and Welsh patronymic surname derived from the personal name Harry (a vernacular form of Henry) and the genitive ending -s.It is also found in Ireland, largely as a result of the Plantation of Ulster, though it may in some cases represent an anglicized form of the Gaelic name Ó hEarchadha.
If elected, Harris could be the first woman, the first Indian American, the first Asian, the first Black woman and the first person of Jamaican descent to ascend to the presidency.
The Haris are people of indigenous origin found in the Indian state of West Bengal. [citation needed]The Haris numbered 390,619 in the 2001 census and were 2.1 per cent of the scheduled caste population of West Bengal. 49.5 per cent of the Haris were literate – 61.6 per cent males and 36.8 per cent females were literate.
“Count me in,” Harris told a voter who asked during a February 2019 campaign stop in Portsmouth, NH, whether she would change the name of the day via federal law.