What is the name meaning of BAXTER. Phrases containing BAXTER
See name meanings and uses of BAXTER!BAXTER
BAXTER
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a wool or flax comber, Middle English kem(be)stere (an agent derivative of Old English cemban ‘to comb’). Although this was originally a feminine form of the masculine kembere, by the Middle English period the suffix -stre had lost its feminine force, and the term was used to refer to both sexes. Compare Baxter, Brewster, Dexter.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Brewster.English : occupational name for an embroiderer, Middle English broudestere (from Old French brouder ‘to embroider’, of Germanic origin). The suffix -ster(e) was originally feminine, but by the Middle English period was being used interchangeably for both men and women in words like Brewster and Baxter, and in some regions such as East Anglia was the standard occupational suffix for men as well as women. Nevertheless, there is no evidence that men did very much embroidery.Swiss German : variant of Brust 2, the suffix -er denoting an inhabitant.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from northern Middle English Spragge, either a personal name or a byname meaning ‘lively’, a metathesized and voiced form of Spark 1.William Sprague came from England to Salem, MA, in 1628 with his brothers Ralph and Richard. He was one of the founders of Charlestown, MA, and later of Hingham, MA. His descendants include Peleg Sprague, a jurist and MA legislator, who was born in 1793 in Duxbury, MA; William Sprague a textile manufacturer born in 1773 in Cranston, RI; and Yale College educator Homer Baxter Sprague, who was born in 1829 in South Sutton, MA, and whose legacy lives on in Yale’s Sprague concert hall.
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, Chinese, Christian, English, German
Baker
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a dyer, Middle English litster, an agent derivative (originally feminine; compare Baxter) of lit(t)e(n) ‘to dye’ (Old Norse lita). This term was used principally in East Anglia and northern and eastern England (areas of Scandinavian settlement), and to this day the surname is found principally in these regions, especially in Yorkshire.Scottish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac an Fhleisdeir ‘son of the arrow maker’.
BAXTER
BAXTER
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
A great man a chief, a hero
Female
Hebrew
(×ֲבִיבָה) Feminine form of Hebrew Aviv, AVIVA means "springtime."
Surname or Lastname
English (Midlands)
English (Midlands) : patronymic from an unidentified medieval personal name (see Hinkson).
Boy/Male
Arabic, Indian, Muslim
Emotions; Stubborn
Biblical
the curse of trembling
Girl/Female
Arabic, Gujarati, Indian, Muslim, Parsi
Memory
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Pride of King
Boy/Male
Indian
Protector of the faith
Boy/Male
Hindu
Particular
Girl/Female
American, Arabic, English, French, Spanish
Smart; Playful; Nice; Strong; A Jewel; Amber Coloured; Ruler of the Jewel; Combination of Amber and Kimberly; A Jewel-quality Fossilized Resin; As a Colour the Name Refers to a Warm Honey Shade; Name of a Semiprecious Stone
BAXTER
BAXTER
BAXTER
BAXTER
BAXTER
n.
A baker; originally, a female baker.