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  • Ham
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly southwestern England)

    Ham

    English (mainly southwestern England) : variant spelling of Hamm.French : habitational name from any of the various places in northern France (Ardennes, Pas-de-Calais, Somme, Moselle) named with the Germanic word ham ‘meadow in the bend of a river’, ‘water meadow’, ‘flood plain’.Dutch : variant of Hamme.Korean : there is only one Chinese character for the Ham surname. Some sources report that there are sixty different Ham clans, but only the Kangnŭng Ham clan can be documented. Although some records have been lost and a few generations are unaccounted for, it is known that the founding ancestor of the Ham clan is Ham Kyu, a Koryŏ general who fought against the Mongol invaders in the thirteenth century. His ancestor, Ham Hyŏk, was a Tang Chinese general who stayed in Korea after Tang China helped Shilla unify the peninsula during the seventh century. Another of Ham Hyŏk’s ancestors, Ham Shin, accompanied Kim Chu-wŏn, the founding ancestor of the Kangnŭng Kim family, to the Kangnŭng area, and hence the Ham clan became the Kangnŭng Ham clan. The first prominent ancestor from Kangnŭng whose genealogy can be verified is Ham Kyu, the Koryŏ general. Accordingly, he is regarded as the Kangnŭng Ham clan’s founding ancestor.

  • Musson
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (East Midlands)

    Musson

    English (East Midlands) : of uncertain origin, ostensibly a patronymic, though Reaney believes it to be a nickname from Anglo-Norman French muisson ‘sparrow’.French : variant of Musset (see Mussett 1).French : nickname from Old French moisson, mousson, ‘sparrow’.French : habitational name from Mousson in Meuse-et-Moselle, named with the Latin personal name Montius + the suffix -onem, or alternatively, with Latin mons ‘mountain’ + the suffix -ionem.

  • Hemming
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly West Midlands), Scottish, and Swedish

    Hemming

    English (chiefly West Midlands), Scottish, and Swedish : from the Old Norse personal name Hemingr, of uncertain origin, apparently related to hemingr ‘skin on the hind legs of an animal’.German (Frisian) : patronymic from Hemme 1.French : habitational name from Heming in Moselle.

  • MOSES
  • Male

    English

    MOSES

    Anglicized form of Hebrew Moshe and Greek Mouses, MOSES means "drawn out." In the bible, this is the name of the leader who brought the Israelites out of bondage and led them to the promised land. 

  • Mars
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Mars

    English : variant of Marsh.French : habitational name from places so named in Ardèche, Ardennes, Gard, Loire, Nièvre, and Meurthe-et-Moselle, from the Latin personal name Marcius, used adjectivally.French : from the personal name Meard, Mard, Mart, vernacular forms of the saint’s name Médard. Morlet notes that there are a number of places called Saint-Mars, formerly recorded in Latin as Sanctus Medardus.French : from the name of the month, mars ‘ March’, denoting seed sown in March, and hence a metonymic name for an arable grower.French (De Mars) : habitational name from Mars in the Ardennes.Dutch : from a short form of the personal name Marsilius.

  • Cleveland
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Cleveland

    English : regional name from the district around Middlesbrough named Cleveland ‘the land of the cliffs’, from the genitive plural (clifa) of Old English clif ‘bank’, ‘slope’ + land ‘land’.Americanized spelling of Norwegian Kleiveland or Kleveland, habitational names from any of five farmsteads in Agder and Vestlandet named with Old Norse kleif ‘rocky ascent’ or klefi ‘closet’ (an allusion to a hollow land formation) + land ‘land’.Grover Cleveland (1837–1908), 22nd and 24th president of the U.S., was the fifth child of a country Presbyterian clergyman. His father, Richard Falley Cleveland, a graduate of Yale College and of the theological seminary at Princeton, was descended from a certain Moses Cleaveland who arrived in MA in 1635.

  • Moseley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Moseley

    English : variants Mosley. The form Moseley occurs mainly in the West Midlands.

  • MOSE
  • Male

    English

    MOSE

    Short form of English Moses, MOSE means "drawn out."

  • Moserah
  • Biblical

    Moserah

    Moseroth, erudition; discipline

  • Trice
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Kent)

    Trice

    English (Kent) : perhaps a variant of Treece.Altered spelling of German Treis, a topographic name for someone who lived by or owned an uncultivated piece of land used as pasture, from Middle Low German drīsch ‘fallow land’, or a habitational name from a place named with this word (in Hessian dialect treis), in Hesse or on the Mosel river. Alternatively, in some instances it may be from a short form of the personal name Andreas (see Andrew).

  • Ley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Ley

    English : variant of Lye.French : habitational name from Ley in Moselle.French and German : from a medieval personal name, Eloy (Latin Eligius, a derivative of eligere ‘to choose or elect’), made popular by a 6th-century saint who came to be venerated as the patron of smiths and horses.German (Rhineland) : topographic name from Middle High German leie ‘rock’, ‘stone’, ‘slate’, or a habitational name from any of several places named with this word. Compare Leier.

  • Moss
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Welsh

    Moss

    English and Welsh : from the personal name Moss, a Middle English vernacular form of the Biblical name Moses.English and Scottish : topographic name for someone who lived by a peat bog, Middle English, Old English mos, or a habitational name from a place named with this word. (It was not until later that the vocabulary word came to denote the class of plants characteristic of a peat-bog habitat, under the influence of the related Old Norse word mosi.)Americanized form of Moses or some other like-sounding Jewish surname.Irish (Ulster) : part translation of Gaelic Ó Maolmhóna ‘descendant of Maolmhóna’, a personal name composed of the elements maol ‘servant’, ‘tonsured one’, ‘devotee’ + a second element which was assumed to be móin (genitive móna) ‘moorland’, ‘peat bog’.

  • Moyse
  • Surname or Lastname

    Jewish

    Moyse

    Jewish : variant of Moses.English (Devon and Norfolk) and French : from a medieval variant of the personal name Moses (Middle English Moise, Old French Moïse).

  • Mose
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, Christian, Finnish, Hebrew

    Mose

    Saviour; Taken from Water; Moses; Saved from the Water; Drawn out

  • Tryon
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Tryon

    English : of Dutch origin and uncertain derivation.A Northamptonshire, England, family of this name trace their descent from Peter Trieon (d. 1611), who went to England from the Netherlands c.1562. His son, Moses Tryon, was high sheriff of Northamptonshire in 1624.

  • Moseby
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Midlands)

    Moseby

    English (Midlands) : unexplained; perhaps a habitational name from a lost or unidentified place.Norwegian : habitational name from a farmstead in eastern Norway, named from mos ‘(bog) moss’ + by ‘farm’.

  • Caleb
  • Surname or Lastname

    Reduced and altered form of Scottish and Irish McKillip, a Gaelic patronymic from Philip. The form of the name, originally Killip, has been assimilated to that of the Biblical personal name Caleb.English and Welsh

    Caleb

    Reduced and altered form of Scottish and Irish McKillip, a Gaelic patronymic from Philip. The form of the name, originally Killip, has been assimilated to that of the Biblical personal name Caleb.English and Welsh : from the Biblical Hebrew personal name Caleb, the name of one of the only two men who set out with Moses from Egypt to live long enough to enter the promised land (Numbers 26:65). This name, which is derived from a Hebrew word meaning ‘dog’, was popular among the Puritans in the 17th century and was brought by them as a personal name to America.

  • Mosey
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Mosey

    English : from a vernacular form of the personal name Moses.

  • Mosely
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Mosely

    English : variants Mosley. The form Moseley occurs mainly in the West Midlands.

  • Lay
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Lay

    English : variant of Lee.Scottish : reduced variant of McClay.French : habitational name from places so named in Loire, Meurthe-et-Moselle, and Pyrénées-Atlantique.German : habitational name from places so named, in the Rhineland near Koblenz and in Bavaria, named with lay(h), a word meaning ‘stone’, ‘rock’, ‘slate’.

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MOSE

  • Premosaic
  • a.

    Relating to the time before Moses; as, premosaic history.

  • Legal
  • a.

    According to the old or Mosaic dispensation; in accordance with the law of Moses.

  • Exodus
  • n.

    A going out; particularly (the Exodus), the going out or journey of the Israelites from Egypt under the conduct of Moses; and hence, any large migration from a place.

  • Decalogue
  • n.

    The Ten Commandments or precepts given by God to Moses on Mount Sinai, and originally written on two tables of stone.

  • Un-Mosaic
  • a.

    Not according to Moses; unlike Moses or his works.

  • Nazarene
  • n.

    One of a sect of Judaizing Christians in the first and second centuries, who observed the laws of Moses, and held to certain heresies.

  • Patriarch
  • n.

    The father and ruler of a family; one who governs his family or descendants by paternal right; -- usually applied to heads of families in ancient history, especially in Biblical and Jewish history to those who lived before the time of Moses.

  • Moselle
  • n.

    A light wine, usually white, produced in the vicinity of the river Moselle.

  • Nehushtan
  • n.

    A thing of brass; -- the name under which the Israelites worshiped the brazen serpent made by Moses.

  • Judaism
  • n.

    The religious doctrines and rites of the Jews as enjoined in the laws of Moses.

  • Mosel
  • n. & v.

    See Muzzle.

  • Mosaism
  • n.

    Attachment to the system or doctrines of Moses; that which is peculiar to the Mosaic system or doctrines.

  • Tradition
  • n.

    An unwritten code of law represented to have been given by God to Moses on Sinai.

  • Prophet
  • n.

    One inspired or instructed by God to speak in his name, or announce future events, as, Moses, Elijah, etc.

  • Mosaic
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to Moses, the leader of the Israelites, or established through his agency; as, the Mosaic law, rites, or institutions.

  • Judaizer
  • n.

    One who conforms to or inculcates Judaism; specifically, pl. (Ch. Hist.), those Jews who accepted Christianity but still adhered to the law of Moses and worshiped in the temple at Jerusalem.

  • Pentateuch
  • n.

    The first five books of the Old Testament, collectively; -- called also the Law of Moses, Book of the Law of Moses, etc.

  • Moses
  • n.

    A large flatboat, used in the West Indies for taking freight from shore to ship.

  • Deuteronomy
  • n.

    The fifth book of the Pentateuch, containing the second giving of the law by Moses.

  • Impure
  • a.

    Not purified according to the ceremonial law of Moses; unclean.