What is the name meaning of PRIMROSE. Phrases containing PRIMROSE
See name meanings and uses of PRIMROSE!PRIMROSE
PRIMROSE
Girl/Female
Christian & English(British/American/Australian)
First Rose
Female
Welsh
Welsh name BRIALLEN means "primrose."
Girl/Female
English Latin
Primrose (flower name).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Cumbria (Westmorland). The place name is recorded in Domesday Book as Lupetun, and probably derives from an Old English personal name Hluppa (of uncertain origin) + Old English tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’.The name was brought to America by John Lupton, who sailed from Gravesend, England, on the Primrose in 1635, and is recorded in VA three years later. On 24 October 1635 Davie Lupton set off on the Constance bound for VA, but there is no record of his arrival in the New World. A Christopher Lupton is recorded in Suffolk Co., Long Island, NY, c.1635, and a large number of Luptons in NC descend from him. An American family of the name settled in the area of Winchester, VA, in the mid18th century; they can be traced back to Martin Lupton, who was married in 1630 in the parish of Rothwell, Yorkshire, England.
Girl/Female
Australian, British, Christian, English, Jamaican, Latin
First Rose
Girl/Female
Australian, Welsh
Primrose
Female
English
English name derived from the flower name, from Latin prima rosa, PRIMROSE means "first rose."Â
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PRIMROSE
PRIMROSE
PRIMROSE
PRIMROSE
n.
A species of Primula, either the cowslip or the primrose.
n.
The genus of plants including the primrose (Primula vera).
n.
A plant with a small bright flower, as the Adonis or pheasant's eye, the mealy primrose (Primula farinosa), and species of Veronica, Geranium, etc.
n.
A species of Primula, or primrose, called also, from the shape of its leaves, bear's-ear.
n.
A genus of plants of the Primrose family, having depressed rounded corms, and pretty nodding flowers with the petals so reflexed as to point upwards, whence it is called rabbits' ears. It is also called sow bread, because hogs are said to eat the corms.
n.
See Primrose.
a.
Of or pertaining to an order of herbaceous plants (Primulaceae), of which the primrose is the type, and the pimpernel, the cyclamen, and the water violet are other examples.
a.
Pertaining to, or resembling, a natural order of plants (Onagraceae or Onagrarieae), which includes the fuchsia, the willow-herb (Epilobium), and the evening primrose (/nothera).
n.
A species of primrose. See Auricula.
n.
A kind of primrose (Primula auricula), so called from the shape of the leaf.
a.
Of or pertaining to the primrose; of the color of a primrose; -- hence, flowery; gay.
n.
A plant of the genus Soldanella, low Alpine herbs of the Primrose family.
a.
An early flowering plant of the genus Primula (P. vulgaris) closely allied to the cowslip. There are several varieties, as the white-, the red-, the yellow-flowered, etc. Formerly called also primerole, primerolles.
a.
Any plant of the genus Primula.
a.
Having the anthers raised above the stigma, and visible at the throat of the corolla, as in long-stamened primroses; -- the reverse of pin-eyed.