What is the name meaning of LAVENDER. Phrases containing LAVENDER
See name meanings and uses of LAVENDER!LAVENDER
LAVENDER
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Lavender
Girl/Female
Australian, British, Christian, English
A Colour Name; A Lavender Flower
Boy/Male
Indian
Lavender
Surname or Lastname
English and Dutch
English and Dutch : 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.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Lavender
Girl/Female
Muslim
Lavender
Female
English
English color and flower name derived from the vocabulary word, from Anglo-Saxon lavendre, from Late Latin lavendula which may ultimately derive from lividus, LAVENDER means "bluish, livid." Since 1840, the word has had the meaning "pale purple."Â
Girl/Female
Muslim
Lavender
Female
Czechoslovakian
, lavender.
Girl/Female
British, English, Indian, Latin
Lavender; Lord Ganesha
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Lavender.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim, Sindhi
Lavender
Boy/Male
Muslim
Lavender
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Lavender.
Surname or Lastname
German and Jewish (Ashkenazic)
German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : topographic name from Middle High German lant, German Land ‘land’, ‘territory’ (see Land 1), used originally to denote either someone who was a native of the area in which he lived, in contrast to a newcomer (see Neumann), or someone who lived in the countryside as opposed to a town.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : habitational name from either of two places called Landau (see Landau), Lande in Yiddish.Dutch : from a Germanic personal name formed with land ‘land’ + hardu ‘strong’.English : variant of Lavender.Americanized form (translation) of French Terrien, found in New England.
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LAVENDER
n.
The Statice limonium, or sea lavender.
n.
A mineral occuring in silky fibers of a lavender blue color. It is related to hornblende and is essentially a silicate of iron and soda; -- called also blue asbestus. A silicified form, in which the fibers penetrating quartz are changed to oxide of iron, is the yellow brown tiger-eye of the jewelers.
n.
Spike lavender. See Lavender.
n.
A European species of lavender (Lavandula spica), which produces a volatile oil. See Spike.
n.
The French lavender (Lavandula Stoechas)
a.
Of the color of lavender; pale blue with a slight mixture of gray.
n.
Any medicine the dose of which is measured by drops; as, lavender drops.
n.
A genus of plants, one species of which (A. Mexicanum) has lavender-blue flowers in dense clusters.
n.
The pale, purplish color of lavender flowers, paler and more delicate than lilac.
n.
An aromatic plant of the genus Lavandula (L. vera), common in the south of Europe. It yields and oil used in medicine and perfumery. The Spike lavender (L. Spica) yields a coarser oil (oil of spike), used in the arts.