rottedw's Personal Name List
Applegate
Usage: English
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Extremely common variant of
Applegarth, in which the less familiar final element has been assimilated to the northern Middle English word gate meaning "road" or to modern English gate.
Arrowsmith
Usage: English
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Given to someone who made arrows from the Old English elements
arwe "arrow" and
smiþ "smith".
Barbon
Usage: French (Quebec)
Personal remark: also Barebone
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Derived from the nickname barbon meaning "old codger" as well as referring to a "confirmed bachelor".
Beaumont
Usage: French, English
Pronounced: BO-MAWN(French) BO-mahnt(American English) BO-mawnt(British English)
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From French place names derived from beau "beautiful" and mont "mountain".
Becker
Usage: German
Pronounced: BEH-ku
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Derived from Middle High German becker meaning "baker".
Belmont
Usage: French, English
Pronounced: BEHL-MAWN(French) BEHL-mahnt(American English) BEHL-mawnt(British English)
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Benavides
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: be-nah-VEE-dez
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Patronymic name from the Medieval personal name Ben Avid, of Arabic origin, derived from ibn Abd meaning "son of the servant of God".
Birdsong
Usage: English
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From the English words bird and song. Possibly an English translation of the German surname Vogelsang.
Blythe
Usage: English
Pronounced: BLIEDH
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From Old English meaning "happy, joyous, blithe".
Bonatti
Usage: Italian
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Comes from the pesonal name 'Bona' which is derived from Latin 'bonus', which means 'great'.
Canabrava
Usage: Brazilian
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Cana is the short form of 'cana de açucar' that means "sugar cane", and Brava is the feminine form of 'bravo' that means "angry". There is a municipality in the state of Mato Grosso, Brazil, called Canabrava do Norte, and according to oral tradition, the origin of the name is due to the disease and subsequent death of some animals after eating a plantation of sugar cane.
Castillo
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: kas-TEE-yo
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Charity
Usage: English
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Church
Usage: English
Pronounced: CHURCH(American English) CHUCH(British English)
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From the English word, derived from Old English
cirice, ultimately from Greek
κυριακόν (kyriakon) meaning "(house) of the lord". It probably referred to a person who lived close to a church.
Crabtree
Usage: English
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The ancestors of the Crabtree surname lived in the ancient Anglo-Saxon culture. It comes from when they lived in the county of Yorkshire. Their name, however, indicates that the original bearer lived near a prominent crabtree.
Crane
Usage: English
Pronounced: krayn
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From Middle English
crane "crane (bird)", a nickname for a tall, thin man with long legs. The term included the heron until the introduction of a separate word for the latter in the 14th century. Can also be an Anglicized form of names with a similar meaning, such as German
Krahn or
Kranich.
Deforest
Usage: French
Personal remark: Or de Forest
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Means "from the forest" in French.
De La Rosa
Usage: Spanish (Latin American)
Pronounced: deh-la-RO-sa(Latin American Spanish)
Personal remark: Also Delarosa
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Means "of the Rose" in Spanish.
Desmond
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, Irish
Pronounced: DEHZ-mənd(English)
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Anglicized form of Irish Deasmhumhain meaning "south Munster", referring to the region of Desmond in southern Ireland, formerly a kingdom. It can also come from the related surname (an Anglicized form of Ó Deasmhumhnaigh), which indicated a person who came from that region. A famous bearer is the South African archbishop and activist Desmond Tutu (1931-2021).
Devereux
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: DEHV-ə-roo
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From an English surname, of Norman French origin, meaning "from Evreux". Evreux is a town in France.
De Vries
Usage: Dutch
Pronounced: də-VREES
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Means "the Frisian" in Dutch, referring to a person from Friesland.
Donadieu
Usage: French
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Meaning “given to God”, surname given to a child because they were given to a priest or monastery or either an orpan.
Donovan
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: DAHN-ə-vən(American English) DAWN-ə-vən(British English)
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From an Irish surname, an Anglicized form of
Ó Donndubháin, itself derived from the given name
Donndubán. This name is borne by the Scottish folk musician Donovan Leitch (1946-), known simply as Donovan.
Doubleday
Usage: English
Pronounced: DUH-buhl-DAY
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Possibly from the nickname or byname
do(u)bel meaning "the twin", or a combination of the given name
Dobbel (a pet form of
Robert) and Middle English
day(e) meaning "servant".
Dubois
Usage: French
Pronounced: DUY-BWA
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Means "from the forest", from French bois "forest".
Fairchild
Usage: English
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Means "beautiful child" in Middle English.
Fairweather
Usage: English, Scottish
Pronounced: FEH-wedh-ə(English) FEHR-wedh-ər(English)
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From Middle English
fayr "fair, beautiful, pleasant" and
weder "weather", a nickname for a person with a sunny temperament, or who only worked in good weather.
A Fairweather family in Scotland have a legend that their surname derived from Job 37:22 ‘Fair weather cometh out of the north’, in reference to them being of northern descent.
Faraday
Usage: Irish
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From Irish Gaelic Ó Fearadaigh "descendant of Fearadach", a personal name probably based on fear "man", perhaps meaning literally "man of the wood". A famous bearer was British chemist and physicist Michael Faraday (1791-1867).
Finch
Usage: English, Literature
Pronounced: FINCH(English)
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From the name of the bird, from Old English finc. It was used by Harper Lee for the surname of lawyer Atticus Finch and his children in her novel To Kill a Mockingbird (1960).
Fitzroy
Usage: English
Personal remark: “Son of the king”
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Means "son of the king" in Anglo-Norman French, from French roi meaning "king". This name has been bestowed upon illegitimate children of kings.
Friend
Usage: English
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Nickname for a companionable person, from Middle English frend "friend" (Old English freond). In the Middle Ages the term was also used to denote a relative or kinsman, and the surname may also have been acquired by someone who belonged to the family of someone who was a more important figure in the community
Greenwood
Usage: English
Pronounced: GREEN-wuwd
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Topographic name for someone who lived in or near a lush forest, from Old English
grene "green" and
wudu "wood".
Hawthorne
Usage: English
Pronounced: HAW-thawrn(American English) HAW-thawn(British English)
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Denoted a person who lived near a hawthorn bush, a word derived from Old English hagaþorn, from haga meaning "enclosure, yard" and þorn meaning "thorn bush". A famous bearer was the American writer Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864), author of The Scarlet Letter.
Home
Usage: English, Scottish
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
English and Scottish variant spelling of
Holme.
Honeycutt
Usage: English
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Derived from the name of the English town of Hunnacott, derived from Old English hunig "honey" or the given name Huna combined with cot "cottage".
Huckleberry
Usage: English
Pronounced: HUK-əl-behr-ee
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From the name of the variety of shrubs (genus Vaccinium) or the berries that grow on them. This is also the anglicized form of the German surname Hackelberg.
Hyde
Usage: English
Pronounced: HIED
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From Middle English hide, a unit of land, approximately the size necessary to support a household.
Innocenti
Usage: Italian
Pronounced: een-no-CHEHN-tee
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From a nickname meaning "innocent" in Italian.
Ivy
Usage: English
Pronounced: i-vee, IE-vi
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Variant of
Ivey. In some cases, might instead be derived from the name of the plant.
Jäger
Usage: German
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
Means "hunter" in German, from Old High German jagon meaning "to hunt".
Jagger
Usage: English
Pronounced: JAG-ər(American English) JAG-ə(British English)
Rating: 0% based on 1 vote
From an English word meaning "carter, peddler". A famous bearer is the British musician Mick Jagger (1943-), the lead singer of the Rolling Stones.
Joy
Usage: English
Pronounced: JOI
Either derived directly from the word, indicating a nickname for a joyous person, or a variant of
Joyce.
Knight
Usage: English
Pronounced: NIET
Personal remark: Or Knightley
From Old English cniht meaning "knight", a tenant serving as a mounted soldier.
Lafayette
The name of Marquis de Lafayette; a famous French man during the revolutionary war.
Lake
Topographic name for someone who lived by a stream, Old English lacu, or a habitational name from a place named with this word, for example in Wiltshire and Devon. Modern English lake (Middle English lake) is only distantly related, if at all; it comes via Old French from Latin lacus. This meaning, which ousted the native sense, came too late to be found as a place name element, but may lie behind some examples of the surname.
Laveau
Usage: French (Cajun)
Pronounced: lah-vo(Cajun French)
A Cajun surname meaning "the calf".
Lavender
Usage: English, Dutch
Pronounced: LAV-ən-dər(English)
Occupational name for a washerman or launderer, Old French, Middle Dutch lavendier (Late Latin lavandarius, an agent derivative of lavanda "washing", "things to be washed"). The term was applied especially to a worker in the wool industry who washed the raw wool or rinsed the cloth after fulling. There is no evidence for any direct connection with the word for the plant (Middle English, Old French lavendre). However, the etymology of the plant name is obscure; it may have been named in ancient times with reference to the use of lavender oil for cleaning or of the dried heads of lavender in perfuming freshly washed clothes.
Lilly
Derived from
Lilly, a pet name for
Elizabeth. It was also used as a nickname for someone with fair skin or hair, and is derived from Old English
lilie meaning "lily (the flower)". It could also serve as a habitual surname for someone from Lilley in Hertfordshire (from
lin "flax" and
leah "clearing") and Berkshire (from
Lillingleah meaning "wood associated with Lilla").
Llewellyn
Derived from the Welsh given name
Llywelyn.
London
Usage: English
Pronounced: LUN-dən
From the name of the capital city of the United Kingdom, the meaning of which is uncertain.
Love
Usage: English
Pronounced: LUV
Personal remark: Also Loving
From the Old English given name Lufu meaning "love".
Lovejoy
Combination of Middle English love(n), luve(n) "to love" and joie "joy".
Lovelace
Usage: English
Pronounced: LUV-lays
From a nickname for a lothario, derived from Middle English lufeles, Old English lufuleas meaning "loveless".
Lowell
Usage: English
Pronounced: LO-əl
From a nickname derived from a Norman French
lou meaning
"wolf" and a
diminutive suffix.
Luna
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: LOO-na
From various places in Spain meaning "moon".
Macaulay
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (British)
Pronounced: mə-KAW-lee
From a Scottish surname, an Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Amhalghaidh, itself derived from Amhalghadh, a given name of unknown meaning. A famous bearer of the surname was Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800-1861), a British Whig politician and noted historian. The given name is borne by the American former child actor Macaulay Culkin (1980-), who was named after the British politician.
Makepeace
From a medieval nickname for a skilled conciliator. It was borne by English cricketer Harry Makepeace (1881-1952).
March
Usage: English
Pronounced: MAHRCH
From the English word meaning, "to walk stiffly and proudly" or possibly from the month.
May
Usage: English
Pronounced: MAY
Derived from the given name
Matthew.
Merryweather
Usage: English
Pronounced: MER-i-wedh-ər
Montague
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: MAHN-tə-gyoo(American English) MAWN-tə-gyoo(British English)
From an aristocratic English surname meaning
"sharp mountain", from Old French
mont agu. In Shakespeare's tragedy
Romeo and Juliet (1596) this is the surname of
Romeo and his family.
Monteverdi
Derived from Italian monte meaning "mountain" and verdi meaning "green"; literally means "green mountain".
Moon 2
Usage: English
Pronounced: MOON
Originally indicated a person from the town of Moyon in Normandy.
Morris
Usage: English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Pronounced: MAWR-is(American English, British English)
Derived from the given name
Maurice.
Mulberry
Variant of
Mowbray, possibly influenced by the name of the fruit.
Noble
Usage: English, Scottish
Pronounced: NO-bəl(English)
From a nickname meaning "noble, high-born, illustrious", derived via Middle English and Old French from Latin nobilis. In some cases the nickname may have been given ironically to people of the opposite character.
Osbourne
Usage: English
Pronounced: AHZ-bawrn(American English) AWZ-bawn(British English)
Derived from the given name
Osborn.
Pastor
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: pas-TOR
Means "shepherd" in Spanish.
Peachey
Usage: English
Personal remark: Also Peach
Penny
Usage: English
Pronounced: PEHN-ee
Personal remark: Or Pennybacker
Nickname meaning "penny, coin" from Old English penning.
Pessegueiro
Means "peach tree" in Portuguese, ultimately from Latin persicum. It indicated a person who lived near or worked with peach trees.
Pink
Usage: English, German
Personal remark: Or Pinkerton
Nickname, possibly for a small person, from Middle English pink
penkg ‘minnow’ (Old English pinc).English (southeastern): variant of
Pinch .Variant spelling of German
Pinck, an indirect occupational name for a blacksmith, an onomatopoeic word imitating the sound of hammering which was perceived as pink(e)pank. German (of Slavic origin): from a diminutive of Sorbian
pien ‘log’, ‘tree stump’, hence probably a nickname for a solid or stubby person.
Primrose
Usage: Scottish
Pronounced: PRIM-roz
From the name of Primrose in Fife, Scotland, a place originally named Prenrhos, literally "tree-moor" in Welsh. This is the family name of the Earls of Rosebery.
Queen
Usage: English
Pronounced: KWEEN
From a given name that was derived from Old English cwen meaning "queen, woman". In some occurrences it may have been a nickname.
Rainwater
Usage: English (American)
Americanized form of the German family name Reinwasser, possibly a topographic name for someone who lived by a source of fresh water, from Middle High German reine ‘pure’ + wazzer ‘water’.
Redwood
Name possibly derived from the colour of the bark of trees or the name of the town Reedworth between Durham and Devon
Rhodes
Usage: English
Pronounced: RODZ
Topographic name derived from Old English rod meaning "cleared land", or a locational name from any of the locations named with this word.
Riordan
From Irish
Ó Ríoghbhárdáin meaning
"descendant of Rígbarddán".
Rose 1
Usage: English, French, German, Jewish
Pronounced: ROZ(English, French) RO-zə(German)
Means
"rose" from Middle English, Old French and Middle High German
rose, all from Latin
rosa. All denote a person of a rosy complexion or a person who lived in an area abundant with roses. As a Jewish surname it is ornamental, from Yiddish
רויז (roiz).
Sacramento
Usage: Spanish, Portuguese
Meaning "sacrament" in Spanish and Portuguese.
Santamaría
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: san-ta-ma-REE-a
Means "Saint
Mary" in Spanish, used as a name for someone from any of various locations named after the Virgin Mary.
Schröder 2
Usage: German
Pronounced: SHRUU-du
Seaborn
From an Old English personal name derived from the elements sǣ "sea, lake" and beorn "warrior".
Seabrook
Denoted a person from a town by this name in Buckinghamshire, England. It is derived from that of a river combined with Old English broc "stream".
Serafin
Usage: Polish, Italian
Pronounced: seh-RA-feen(Polish)
Sherwood
Usage: English
Pronounced: SHUR-wuwd
From a place name meaning "bright forest", derived from Old English
scir meaning "bright" and
wudu meaning "tree, wood".
Shirley
Usage: English
Pronounced: SHUR-lee(American English) SHU-lee(British English)
From an English place name, derived from Old English
scir "bright" and
leah "woodland, clearing".
Sinclair
Usage: English
Pronounced: sin-KLEHR(American English) sin-KLEH(British English)
Derived from a Norman French town called "
Saint Clair".
Southgate
Name for a person who lived near the southern gate of a town or in a town named Southgate, from Old English
suþ and
gæt.
Sparks
Usage: English
Pronounced: SPAHRKS(American English) SPAHKS(British English)
From an Old Norse nickname or byname derived from sparkr meaning "sprightly".
Spendlove
From a medieval nickname for someone who spread their amorous affections around freely. A different form of the surname was borne by Dora Spenlow, the eponymous hero's "child-wife" in Charles Dickens's 'David Copperfield' (1849-50).
(Source: 'Encyclopedia of Surnames' (2007) by John Ayto)
Star
Means "starling (bird)" in German, probably denoting a talkative or perhaps a voracious person. Alternatively, an Anglicized form of
Stern 2.
Stark
Usage: English, German
Pronounced: STAHRK(American English) STAHK(British English)
From a nickname meaning "strong, rigid", from Old English stearc or Old High German stark.
Sugarbaker
Usage: English
Pronounced: SHOO-gər-BAY-kər
Personal remark: Also Sugar
Occupational name for an owner of a sugar-house, a factory where raw sugar was made or refined, derived from Middle English sugre, suker meaning "sugar" and bakere meaning "baker".
Swan
Usage: English, Scottish
Personal remark: Or Swanson
Originally given as a nickname to a person who was noted for purity or excellence, which were taken to be attributes of the swan, or who resembled a swan in some other way. In some cases it may have been given to a person who lived at a house with the sign of a swan. It is also possible that the surname is from the Old Norse and Old English given name
Swan.
Alternatively, it may be a variant of Swain or an Americanized form of German Schwan, Norwegian Sveen or Swedish Svan.
Sweet
Usage: English
Pronounced: SWEET
From a nickname meaning "sweet, pleasant", from Old English swete.
Teagarden
Usage: Low German
Pronounced: tee-GAHR-din
The surname Teagarden was first found in Bavaria, where the name Tiegarten was anciently associated with the tribal conflicts of the area. The name appeared in Solingen as Thegarden as early as 1374 and was recorded as Tegarden in 1488. Theegarten is a district in Solingen today. The root is the Low German te garden meaning ""at the garden"".
Thornton
Usage: English
Pronounced: THAWRN-tən(American English) THAWN-tən(British English)
Personal remark: Thorn/Thornquist
From any of the various places in England by this name, meaning "thorn town" in Old English.
Tiffany
From the medieval female personal name Tiffania (Old French Tiphaine, from Greek Theophania, a compound of theos "God" and phainein "to appear"). This name was often given to girls born around the feast of Epiphany.
Tinker
Usage: English
Pronounced: TING-kər(American English) TING-kə(British English)
Occupational name for a mender of kettles, pots and pans. The name could derive from the tinking sound made by light hammering on metal. It is possible that the word comes from the word tin, the material with which the tinker worked.
Truelove
Usage: English
Pronounced: troo-luff
Underwood
Means "dweller at the edge of the woods", from Old English under and wudu.
Valentine
Usage: English
Pronounced: VAL-in-tien
Van den Akker
Means "from the field" in Dutch.
Vermont
Usage: French (Rare)
Pronounced: VER-MONT
Derived from french, meaning "green mountain" (Vert, "green"; mont, "mountain").
Villalobos
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: bee-ya-LO-bos
Habitational name for a person from the town of Villalobos, Spain, which is derived from Spanish villa "town" and lobo "wolf".
Violet
Derived from the given name
Violet
Vossen
From the given name Vos, which comes from the Frisian name Fos, which is from Old German given names beginning with the element folk meaning "people".
Waterhouse
Old German and Dutch locational name meaning “a house by water.”
White
Usage: English
Pronounced: WIET
Originally a nickname for a person who had white hair or a pale complexion, from Old English
hwit "white".
Willoughby
From the name of various English towns, derived from Old English
welig "willow" and Old Norse
býr "farm, settlement".
Winslow
Usage: English
Pronounced: WINZ-lo
Derived from an Old English place name meaning
"hill belonging to Wine".
Wolf
Usage: German, English
Pronounced: VAWLF(German) WUWLF(English)
From Middle High German or Middle English wolf meaning "wolf", or else from an Old German given name beginning with this element.
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