What is the name meaning of MORLEY. Phrases containing MORLEY
See name meanings and uses of MORLEY!MORLEY
MORLEY
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the various places called Morley (for example in Cheshire, Derbyshire, County Durham, Norfolk, and West Yorkshire), or Moreleigh in Devon, all of which are named from Old English mÅr ‘marsh’, ‘fen’ + lÄ“ah ‘woodland clearing’.Possibly an altered spelling of French Morlet, a nickname from a diminutive of Old French mor ‘brown’, ‘dark’ (from Latin Maurus ‘Moor’).
Surname or Lastname
Irish (County Cork)
Irish (County Cork) : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Murthuile, ‘descendant of Murthuile’, a personal name from murthuile ‘sea tide’ (muir ‘sea’ + tuile ‘tide’, ‘flood’).Irish (Donegal and Mayo) : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Murghaile ‘descendant of Murghal’, a personal name from muir ‘sea’ + gal ‘valor’.English : possibly of Irish origin, but it occurs chiefly in southwestern counties, suggesting that it may be a variant of the habitational name Morley, from Moreleigh in Devon.
Boy/Male
British, Christian, English
Moor; From the Meadow on the Moor
MORLEY
MORLEY
Boy/Male
Muslim
Memory of the tribe
Boy/Male
Tamil
Indradyumn | இநà¯à®¤à¯à®°à®¤à®¯à¯à®®à¯à®¨
Splendor of Indra
Female
English
Variant spelling of English Rexanne, REXANA means "queen."
Male
English
 Variant spelling of English Malachi, MALACHY means "my messenger." Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Maoileachlainn "devotee of Seachlainn," altered to coincide with Hebrew Malakiy ("my messenger").
Male
English
English patronymic surname transferred to forename use, TENNYSON means "son of Tenney."
Girl/Female
English Irish Latin Shakespearean
Innocent. Last born. The name of the heroine of Shakespeare's play Cymbehoe as a result of a...
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Short Name of Mutamid
Male
French
French and Spanish form of Roman Latin Cæsar, CÉSAR means "severed."
Surname or Lastname
Scottish
Scottish : habitational name from Covinton in Lanarkshire, first recorded in the late 12th century in the Latin form Villa Colbani, and twenty years later as Colbaynistun. By 1422 it had been collapsed to Cowantoun, and at the end of the 15th century it first appears in the form Covingtoun. It is nevertheless clearly named with the personal name Colban (see Coleman 1) + Old English tūn ‘enclosure’; Colban was a follower of David, Prince of Cumbria, in about 1120.English : habitational name from a place in Huntingdonshire (now Cambridgeshire) named Covington, from an Old English personal name Cofa + Old English -ing- denoting association + tūn ‘settlement’.
Male
Croatian
, weapon of peace.
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