BtNuserMA14's Personal Name List
Wray
Originally denoted someone who came from any of the various places of this name in northern England, from Old Norse vrá meaning "corner, nook".
Woodrow
Usage: English
Pronounced: WUWD-ro
From a place name meaning "row of houses by a wood" in Old English.
Woodlock
Usage: Irish, French, English
From an Old English personal name,
Wudlac, composed of the elements
wudu ‘wood’ +
lac ‘play’, ‘sport’.
Womack
Of uncertain origin. One theory suggests that it indicated a dweller by a hollow oak tree, derived from Old English womb "hollow" and ac "oak".
Winter
Usage: English, German, Swedish
Pronounced: WIN-tər(English) VIN-tu(German)
From Old English winter or Old High German wintar meaning "winter". This was a nickname for a person with a cold personality.
Welsch
From Middle High German welsch, walsch "person from a Romance country (especially Italy), foreigner", hence an ethnic name or in some cases perhaps a nickname for someone who had trading or other connections with the Romance countries.
Wells
Usage: English
Pronounced: WELZ
Derived from Middle English wille meaning "well, spring, water hole".
Weland
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Anglo-Saxon Mythology
Ventura
Usage: Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan
Pronounced: vehn-TOO-ra(Italian) behn-TOO-ra(Spanish) vehn-TOO-ru(Portuguese) bən-TOO-rə(Catalan)
Vega
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: BEH-gha
From Spanish vega meaning "meadow, plain", of Basque origin.
Vance
Usage: English
Pronounced: VANS
Indicated a dweller by a fen, from Old English fenn meaning "fen, marsh".
Teal
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: TEEL
From the English word for the type of duck or the greenish-blue colour.
Tannen
German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) habitational name from any of several places in Lower Saxony or Baden named with German
Tannen ‘pine’, or from a short form of any of the many compound names formed with this element. Jewish (American) shortened form of
Tannenbaum.
Southwell
English surname meaning "From the south well"
Soto
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: SO-to
Means "grove of trees, small forest" in Spanish, ultimately from Latin saltus.
Sommer 1
Means "summer", from Old High German sumar or Old English sumor. This was a nickname for a cheerful person, someone who lived in a sunny spot, or a farmer who had to pay taxes in the summer.
Soltanov
Usage: Bashkir, Tatar
Other Scripts: Солтанов(Bashkir, Tatar)
Soltani
Usage: Persian, Arabic (Maghrebi)
Other Scripts: سلطانی(Persian) سلطاني(Arabic)
Solos
Possibly a variant of
Solo.
Solo
Means "rural estate" in Basque.
Solís
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: so-LEES
From the name of a village in Asturias, Spain, derived from Spanish sol "sun".
Seymour 2
Usage: English
Pronounced: SEE-mawr
From an English place name, derived from Old English sæ "sea" and mere "lake".
Saxby
Usage: English (British)
Pronounced: Saks-bee(British English)
Saxby is the surname of the character Stella Saxby from the book Awful Auntie, by David Walliams. Saxby means "Grand" .
Santos
Usage: Portuguese, Spanish
Pronounced: SUN-toosh(European Portuguese) SUN-toos(Brazilian Portuguese) SAN-tos(Spanish)
Means
"saint" in Portuguese and Spanish, ultimately from Latin
sanctus. This was a nickname for a pious person.
Rubio
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: ROO-byo
Nickname for a person with red hair, from Latin rubeus "red".
Rosholt
Norwegian: habitational name from either of two farms called Røsholt in southeastern Norway, named with Old Norse, either ross ‘mare’ or ruð ‘clearing’ + holt ‘grove’, ‘wood’.
Rosen
Means "Roses" in German
Rosales
Means "rose bushes" in Spanish.
Rojo
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: RO-kho
Means "red" in Spanish, referring to the colour of the hair or complexion.
Rockwell
Means "person from Rockwell", Buckinghamshire and Somerset (respectively "wood frequented by rooks" and "well frequented by rooks"). Famous bearers include American illustrator Norman Rockwell (1894-1978) and Utah pioneer Porter Rockwell (1813-1878).
Rockmond
Usage: English
Pronounced: rok-mend
Rockemer
Usage: English
Pronounced: ROCKEMER
Rivero
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: ree-BEH-ro
Rivera
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: ree-BEH-ra
From Spanish ribera meaning "bank, shore", from Latin riparius.
Reyes
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: REH-yehs
Spanish variant of
Rey 1.
Rey
Usage: Welsh, Scottish, Irish
Pronounced: RAY(Scottish)
Either a variant of
McRae, or else directly derived from Irish
rí, Scottish
Rìgh, or Welsh
ri,
rhi, or
rhiau, all meaning "king". It is thus related to
Rey 1.
Reinholt
Usage: German
Pronounced: RIEN-hawlt
Reed
Usage: English
Pronounced: REED
Redvers
Usage: English (British)
Pronounced: RED-vəs(British English) RED-vərs(British English)
Variant of
Revere originating in Devon.
Redmer
North German: from the Frisian personal name, composed of the Germanic elements rad ‘advice’, ‘counsel’ + mari, meri ‘fame’.
Răzvan
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Romanian
Meaning unknown, possibly related to the name
Radovan. Alternatively it may have been brought to Romania by the Romani people (note that Romanian and Romani are unrelated), perhaps ultimately from
Rizwan.
Radulay
Usage: Czech (Modern)
Pronounced: Radulaj
Radner
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Soviet
Other Scripts: Раднэр(Russian)
Derived from the Russian phrase радуйся новой эре (raduysya novoy ere) meaning "hail the new era", referring to communism and the Soviet period. This name was used by Soviet parents who were eager to reject traditional Russian names. A known bearer is Radner Muratov (1928-2004), a Russian film actor of Tatar origin.
Radmund
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old High German mund "protection."
Radmar
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old High German mâri "famous."
Radley
Usage: English
Pronounced: RAD-lee
From rēadlēah meaning "red clearing". Radley is a village and civil parish in Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England.
Radgard
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Germanic
The first element of this name is derived from Old High German rât "counsel." The second element is derived from gardan "to hedge in, to enclose, to fence in" or from Gothic gards "house, garden, (court)yard."
Panos
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Greek
Other Scripts: Πάνος(Greek)
Owen
From the Welsh given name
Owain.
Ortega
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: or-TEH-gha
From a Spanish place name (belonging to various villages) derived from ortiga "nettle".
Orosco
Variant of
Orozco. Means "place of the holly trees" from
oros meaning "holly tree" and the suffix
-ko signifying a place. Also believed to have been derived from Latin
orosius meaning "the son of bringer of wisdom".
Oakwell
Probably either from the former village of
Oakwell-in-the-Blean in the county of Kent, or
Ockwell Manor, and again a former village, near Bray, in Berkshire
Oakes
English: Topographic name, a plural variant of
Oak.
Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic
Mac Dubhdara ‘son of
Dubhdara’, a personal name composed of the elements
dubh ‘dark’ +
dara(ch), genitive of
dair ‘oak’, by translation of the main element of the Gaelic name.
Oak
Topographic surname for someone who lived near an oak tree or in an oak wood, from Middle English oke "oak".
Núñez
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: NOO-nyeth(European Spanish) NOO-nyehs(Latin American Spanish)
Nunes
Usage: Portuguese
Pronounced: NOO-nish(European Portuguese) NOO-nees(Brazilian Portuguese)
Noonan
Usage: Irish
Pronounced: NOO-nən
Anglicized form of Irish
Ó Nuanáin (from Irish Gaelic
Ó hIonmhaineáin) meaning "descendant of Ionmhaineán", a diminutive of the given name
Ionmhain "beloved, dear".
In some cases it may be a variant of Noone, an anglicized form of Irish Ó Nuadháin "descendant of Nuadhán" (see Nuadha).
Noon
Either (i) from a medieval nickname for someone of a sunny disposition (noon being the sunniest part of the day); or (ii) from Irish Gaelic
Ó Nuadháin "descendant of
Nuadhán", a personal name based on
Nuadha, the name of various Celtic gods (cf.
Nuada).
Navarro
Denoted a person who came from Navarre in northern Spain (Spanish Navarra). The name of the region is of Basque origin, possibly from nabar meaning "brown".
Naramor
Naramor, also Narramore or Naramore, is a corruption of Northmore, and has Welsh/English background. "More North"
Muñoz
Patronymic derived from the medieval Spanish given name Muño, from Latin Munnius, possibly of Germanic origin.
Mulvey
Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Maoilmhiadhaigh "descendant of Maoilmhiadhach", a personal name meaning "honorable chief".
Morse
Usage: English
Pronounced: MAWRS
Morris
Usage: English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Pronounced: MAWR-is(English)
Derived from the given name
Maurice.
Moros
Habitational name from Moros in Zaragoza province, so named from the plural of moro ‘Moor’, i.e. ‘the place where the Moors live’.
Mörk
Usage: Swedish
Pronounced: MURK
Means "dark" in Swedish.
Mørk
Means "dark" in Danish.
Morita
Usage: Japanese
Other Scripts: 森田(Japanese Kanji) もりた(Japanese Hiragana)
Pronounced: MO-REE-TA
From Japanese
森 (mori) meaning "forest" and
田 (ta) meaning "field, rice paddy".
Morio
Usage: Japanese
Pronounced: MO-REE-O
Mori means "forest" and o means "tail."
Morimoto
Usage: Japanese
Other Scripts: 森本(Japanese Kanji) もりもと(Japanese Hiragana)
Pronounced: MO-REE-MO-TO
From Japanese
森 (mori) meaning "forest" and
本 (moto) meaning "base, root, origin".
Moriai
Usage: Japanese
Other Scripts: 盛合, 森合(Japanese Kanji)
Pronounced: MOH-REE-AH-EE
From the Japanese 盛 (mori) "assortment" or 森 (mori) "forest" and 合 (ai) "fit," "suit," "join."
Mori
Usage: Japanese
Other Scripts: 森(Japanese Kanji) もり(Japanese Hiragana)
Pronounced: MO-REE
From Japanese
森 (mori) meaning
"forest".
Moreno
Usage: Spanish, Portuguese
Pronounced: mo-REH-no(Spanish)
From a nickname meaning "dark" in Spanish and Portuguese.
Moreira
Usage: Portuguese
Pronounced: moo-RAY-ru(European Portuguese) mo-RAY-ru(Brazilian Portuguese)
Derived from Portuguese amoreira meaning "mulberry tree".
Morales
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: mo-RA-lehs
Derived from Spanish moral meaning "mulberry tree", of Latin origin.
Mora
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: MO-ra
Derived from Spanish mora meaning "mulberry", of Latin origin.
Monterosa
Usage: Spanish (Latin American)
From Spanish monte meaning "mountain", and rosa meaning "pink, rose".
Montero
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: mon-TEH-ro
Means "hunter" in Spanish, an agent derivative of monte meaning "mountain, wilderness".
Montaña
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: mon-TA-nya
Meremäe
Meremäe is an Estonian surname meaning "sea hill".
Meadow
A topographic name for someone who lived near a meadow. The form meadow derives from mǣdwe, the dative case of Old English mǣd.
Mayberry
Of uncertain origin, probably an altered form of
Mowbray. Possibly it is derived from an English place name.
Maverick
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: MAV-ə-rik
Surname notably borne by Texas lawyer, politician and land baron Samuel
Maverick (1803-1870) to whom the word
maverick was coined.
Mauris
Usage: English
Pronounced: MAWR-is, mə-REES
This surname may be a variant of
Maurice.
Marzon
Is a portmanteau of the words mar, meaning sea, and corazon, meaning heart.
Marwood
Usage: English
Pronounced: MAHR-wuwd
From the name of two places named Marwood in England, or a nickname for a person who "casts an evil eye", derived from Norman French malreward meaning "evil eye, glance".
Marlock
Derived from Middle High German and Middle Low German mar(e), denoting an evil elf, a creature that sits on one's chest at night, and Middle High German loc "a lock of hair; hair; mane". In folklore, a Marlock (also known as Marlocke, Morlock, Morlocke or Weichselzopf) is an inextricable mop of hair that said evil elf created.
Marku
Derived from the given name
Mark.
Marković
Usage: Serbian, Croatian
Other Scripts: Марковић(Serbian)
Markov
Usage: Bulgarian, Russian
Other Scripts: Марков(Bulgarian, Russian)
Pronounced: MAR-kəf(Russian)
Mark
Usage: English
Pronounced: MAHRK
Derived from the given name
Mark.
Marcos
Usage: Spanish, Portuguese
Pronounced: MAR-kos(Spanish) MAR-koosh(European Portuguese) MAKH-koos(Brazilian Portuguese)
From the given name
Marcos. A famous bearer was Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos (1917-1989).
Lovelock
From a medieval nickname for a dandy or a man conceited about his appearance (from lovelock, a term for an elaborately curled lock of hair). This surname is borne by British scientist James Lovelock (1919-), formulator of the "Gaia" concept.
Lockyer
Variant of
Locklear. Lockyer is an occupational name of anglo-saxon origin meaning "locksmith".
Locklear
Variant of
Lockyer. Locklear is an occupational name of anglo-saxon origin meaning "locksmith".
Lock
Usage: English, Dutch, German
Pronounced: LAWK(English)
Habitational name from any of various places derived from Old English loca meaning "(locked) enclosure, stronghold".
Ledger
From the given name
Leodegar or
Legier. Alternatively, could be an occupational name for a stonemason, ultimately derived from Old English
lecgan "to put, place, lay (down)".
Ives
Means "son of
Ive", a medieval male personal name, brought into England by the Normans but ultimately of Germanic origin, a shortened form of any of a range of compound names beginning with
īv "yew" (cf. modern French
Yves). This surname was borne by American film director Charles Ives (1874-1954).
Irwin
Usage: English
Pronounced: UR-win
Derived from the Old English given name
Eoforwine.
Ibarra
From Basque place names derived from ibar meaning "meadow".
Holter
Usage: English, German, Norwegian
Derived from English holt meaning "small wood". A topographic name for someone who lived near a small wooden area, as well as a habitational name from a place named with that element.
Holt
Usage: English, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian
Pronounced: HOLT(English)
From Old English, Old Dutch and Old Norse holt meaning "forest".
Holmström
From Swedish
holme (Old Norse
holmr) meaning "small island" and
ström (Old Norse
straumr) meaning "stream".
Holmgren
Usage: Swedish
Pronounced: HAWLM-grehn
Ornamental name derived from Swedish
holme (Old Norse
holmr) meaning "small island" and
gren (Old Norse
grein) meaning "branch".
Holm
Usage: Swedish, Norwegian, Danish
From Swedish, Danish and Norwegian
holme, holm meaning
"islet" (Old Norse
holmr).
Holguín
Possibly from Spanish holgar "to rest, to enjoy oneself".
Holbrook
Usage: English, German (Anglicized)
English: habitational name from any of various places, for example in Derbyshire, Dorset, and Suffolk, so called from Old English
hol ‘hollow’, ‘sunken’ +
broc ‘stream’.
The name has probably absorbed the Dutch surname
van Hoobroek, found in London in the early 17th century, and possibly a similar Low German surname (
Holbrock or
Halbrock). Several American bearers of the name in the 1880 census give their place of birth as Oldenburg or Hannover, Germany.
Heath
Usage: English
Pronounced: HEETH
Originally belonged to a person who was a dweller on the heath or open land.
Harwood
Usage: English, Scots
Pronounced: HAHR-wuwd
Habitation name found especially along the border areas of England and Scotland, from the Old English elements har meaning "gray" or hara referring to the animals called "hares" plus wudu for "wood". Therefore a location name meaning "from a gray wood or from a wood known for the presence of hares".
Harwin
From the Old French personal name Harduin, composed of the Germanic elements hard 'hardy', 'brave' + win 'friend'.
Groves
Usage: English
Pronounced: GROVZ
From Old English graf meaning "grove". This originally indicated a person who lived near a grove (a group of trees).
Grover
Usage: English
Pronounced: GRO-vər
From Old English graf meaning "grove of trees". A famous bearer was the American president Grover Cleveland (1837-1908).
Flores
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: FLO-rehs
Means
"son of Floro" in Spanish.
Burl
Usage: English
Pronounced: BURL
Old English occupational name originally meaning "cup bearer" or "butler" for one who dispensed wine and had charge of the cellar. Eventually the name came to mean the chief servant of a royal or noble household and was replaced by the French language inspired named 'Butler,' akin to the world "bottler".
Buren
From Old Dutch
bur "house, dwelling". This is a small town on the island of Ameland in the north of the
Netherlands, as well as a small city in Gelderland.
Brunwin
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Medieval English, Anglo-Saxon
Variant of
Brunwine, an Old English name composed of the elements
brun meaning "brown" and
wine meaning "friend".
Brunric
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Germanic
Derived from Old High German brunja "breastplate, cuirass" or brûn "brown" combined with rîcja "powerful, strong, mighty." The second element is also closely related to Celtic rîg or rix and Gothic reiks, which all mean "king, ruler."
Brunon
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Polish, French, Lengadocian, Provençal, Gascon
Pronounced: BROO-nawn(Polish)
Variant of
Bruno based on the genitive form of the Latin declination.
Brunlocc
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Anglo-Saxon
Late Old English name meaning "brown lock (of hair)", composed of the elements
brun "brown" and
locc "hair, curl" (probably originally a byname).
Brownley
Usage: English, Scottish
Personal remark: Bronly
Variant spelling of "Brownlee". Brown field in Old English.
Brown
Usage: English
Pronounced: BROWN
Originally a nickname for a person who had brown hair or skin. A notable bearer is Charlie Brown from the Peanuts comic strip by Charles Schulz.
Bronze
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English
Bronze is a yellowish-brown alloy of copper with up to one-third tin. It is a modern first name. In the US, 5 girls and 9 boys were given this first name in 2018.
Braun
Usage: German
Pronounced: BROWN
Means "brown" in German.
Beynon
Southern Welsh variant of
Bennion; from Welsh
ab Eynon meaning "son of
Einion".
Beyersdorf
Means "farmers village", from German Bauer meaning "farmer" and Dorf meaning "village".
Bey
Usage: French, German, Frisian
North German and Frisian: from the Old Frisian personal name
Beyo or
Boy/
Boye (see
Boye).
French: habitational name from any of the places so named, in Ain, Meurthe-et-Moselle, or Saône-et-Loire.
French (Burgundy): topographic name for someone who lived by a mill stream.
Banderas
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: ban-DEH-ras
Ashworth
From an English place name meaning "ash enclosure" in Old English.
Ashwill
Usage: English
Personal remark: Ashwell
Ashmore
Usage: English
Pronounced: ASH-mor
English locational name, from either "Aisemare", (from Old English pre 7th Century "aesc" meaning ash plus "mere" a lake; hence "lake where ash-trees grow), or from any of several minor places composed of the Old English elements "aesc" ash plus "mor" a marsh or fen.
Ashfield
Usage: English
Pronounced: ASH-feeld
Meaning "ash tree field".
Asher
Usage: Jewish
Other Scripts: אשר(Hebrew)
Pronounced: a-SHEHR(Hebrew)
From the given name
Asher.
Ashcroft
English (chiefly Lancashire) topographic name from Middle English asche ‘ash tree’ + croft ‘enclosure’, or a habitational name from a minor place named with these elements.
Ashby
English: habitational name from any of the numerous places in northern and eastern England called Ashby, from Old Norse
askr ‘ash’ or the Old Norse personal name
Aski +
býr ‘farm’.
Ashbrook
Usage: English
Pronounced: ASH-BRUWK
Derived from Ampney St Mary, a small village and civil parish locally known as "Ashbrook", in Gloucestershire, England (recorded in the Domesday Book as Estbroce). It is named with Old English est meaning "east, eastern" and broc meaning "brook, stream".
Ash
Usage: English
Pronounced: ASH
From Old English
æsc meaning
"ash tree", indicating a person who lived near ash trees.
Araya
Denoted a person from Araia in the Basque Country, Spain. It is of uncertain meaning.
Anholts
Originally denoted a person from Anholt in the Netherlands, which means "hold, rest" in Dutch (a place where people could rest for the night).
Ace
Usage: English, Norman, Medieval French
The surname Ace's origin is from a Norman and Old French personal name, Ace, Asse, from Germanic Frankish origin Azzo, Atso, a pet form of personal names containing adal ‘noble’ as a first element.
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