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Re: Leyton Hewitt
Lexicographers Hanks & Hodges have the following to say about the name "Leyton":LEYTON English: 1. habitation name from "Leyton" in Essex, so called from the British river name "Lea" (of uncertain etymology, perhaps from the Celtic element "lug-", "light") + Old English "tun", "enclosure, settlement". 2. variation of LAYTON or LEIGHTON.LAYTON English: habitation name from any of various places so called, e.g. in Lancashire (near Blackpool) and in North Yorkshire. The former gets its name from Old English "lad", "water-course" + "tun", "enclosure, settlement", the latter from Old English "leac", "leek" + "tun".LEIGHTON English: habitation name from any of various places so called. Most, as for example those in Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire,
Cheshire, Lancashire, and Shropshire, get the name from Old English "leac", "leek" + "tun", "settlement".-- Nanaea
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Leyton Hewitt  ·  Mark Woodall  ·  7/2/2001, 1:13 PM
Re: Leyton Hewitt  ·  Nanaea  ·  7/2/2001, 5:15 PM