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SIDES

  • Dinsdale
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Dinsdale

    English : habitational name from a settlement on both sides of the Tees river, so partly in County Durham and partly in North Yorkshire. The place is named in Old English as Dīctūneshalh ‘nook, recess (Old English halh) belonging to Deighton’.

  • AMPHIÅŒN
  • Male

    Greek

    AMPHIÅŒN

    (Ἀμφίων) Greek name probably AMPHIŌN means "moving double" or "moving on both sides." In mythology, this is the name of a son of Zeus and Antiope.

  • Dudley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Irish

    Dudley

    English and Irish : habitational name from Dudley in the West Midlands, named from the Old English personal name Dudda (see Dodd) + Old English lēah ‘woodland clearing’.Irish (County Cork) : English name adopted by bearers of Gaelic Ó Dubhdáleithe ‘descendant of Dubhdáleithe’, a personal name composed of the elements dubh ‘black’ + dá ‘two’ + léithe ‘sides’.Thomas Dudley (1576–1653), born at Northampton, England, sailed on the Arbella to Salem, MA, in 1630 with the chief men of the Massachusetts Bay Company. They first settled at Newtown. Dudley subsequently moved to Ipswich but then permanently settled at Roxbury. He was elected four times as governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and as one of the two commissioners for the colony when the New England Confederation was formed in 1643. He was one of the first overseers of Harvard University, and in 1650, as governor, signed the charter for that institution. Dudley’s seventh and most noted child, Joseph (1647–1720) was also governor of MA (1702–15).

  • Sides
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Sides

    English : topographic name for someone who lived on a slope, from Middle English side ‘slope’ (Old English sīde), or a habitational name from Syde in Gloucestershire, named with this word. This name is also established in Ireland.

  • Sheldon
  • Girl/Female

    British, English

    Sheldon

    Valley with Steep Sides

  • Dishan
  • Boy/Male

    Christian, Indian, Tamil

    Dishan

    Sides of Happiness; A Thresher; A Species of Gazelle; Directions

  • Hayes
  • Surname or Lastname

    Irish

    Hayes

    Irish : reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hAodha ‘descendant of Aodh’, a personal name meaning ‘fire’ (compare McCoy). In some cases, especially in County Wexford, the surname is of English origin (see below), having been taken to Ireland by the Normans.English : habitational name from any of various places, for example in Devon and Worcestershire, so called from the plural of Middle English hay ‘enclosure’ (see Hay 1), or a topographic name from the same word.English : habitational name from any of various places, for example in Dorset, Greater London (formerly in Kent and Middlesex), and Worcestershire, so called from Old English hǣse ‘brushwood’, or a topographic name from the same word.English : patronymic from Hay 3.French : variant (plural) of Haye 3.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : metronymic from Yiddish name Khaye ‘life’ + the Yiddish possessive suffix -s.U.S. President Rutherford B. Hayes (1822–1893), born in Delaware, OH, was descended from old New England families on both sides. Through the paternal line he was descended from George Hayes, who emigrated from Scotland in 1680 and settled in Windsor, CT.

  • Nicholas
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Dutch

    Nicholas

    English and Dutch : from the personal name (Greek Nikolaos, from nikān ‘to conquer’ + laos ‘people’). Forms with -ch- are due to hypercorrection (compare Anthony). The name in various vernacular forms was popular among Christians throughout Europe in the Middle Ages, largely as a result of the fame of a 4th-century Lycian bishop, about whom a large number of legends grew up, and who was venerated in the Orthodox Church as well as the Catholic. In English-speaking countries, this surname is also found as an Americanized form of various Greek surnames such as Papanikolaou ‘(son of) Nicholas the priest’ and patronymics such as Nikolopoulos.The colonial official and revolutionary patriot Robert Carter Nicholas was from a prominent VA family on both sides. His father was a British navy surgeon who emigrated in about 1700 from Lancashire, England, to Williamsburg, VA.

  • Melanthius
  • Boy/Male

    Greek

    Melanthius

    Sides with Penelope's suitors against his master Odysseus.

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SIDES

  • Triquetrous
  • a.

    Three sided, the sides being plane or concave; having three salient angles or edges; trigonal.

  • Vis-a-vis
  • n.

    A carriage in which two persons sit face to face. Also, a form of sofa with seats for two persons, so arranged that the occupants are face to face while sitting on opposite sides.

  • Two-sided
  • a.

    Having two sides only; hence, double-faced; hypocritical.

  • Sidesmen
  • pl.

    of Sidesman

  • Turn
  • v. t.

    To cause to move upon a center, or as if upon a center; to give circular motion to; to cause to revolve; to cause to move round, either partially, wholly, or repeatedly; to make to change position so as to present other sides in given directions; to make to face otherwise; as, to turn a wheel or a spindle; to turn the body or the head.

  • Unequal
  • a.

    Not having the two sides or the parts symmetrical.

  • Valley
  • n.

    The space inclosed between ranges of hills or mountains; the strip of land at the bottom of the depressions intersecting a country, including usually the bed of a stream, with frequently broad alluvial plains on one or both sides of the stream. Also used figuratively.

  • Two-edged
  • a.

    Having two edges, or edges on both sides; as, a two-edged sword.

  • Two-ranked
  • a.

    Alternately disposed on exactly opposite sides of the stem so as to from two ranks; distichous.

  • Voided
  • a.

    Having the inner part cut away, or left vacant, a narrow border being left at the sides, the tincture of the field being seen in the vacant space; -- said of a charge.

  • Trirhomboidal
  • a.

    Having three rhombic faces or sides.

  • Uniformity
  • n.

    Similitude between the parts of a whole; as, the uniformity of sides in a regular figure; beauty is said to consist in uniformity with variety.

  • Triquadrantal
  • a.

    Having three quadrants; thus, a triquadrantal triangle is one whose three sides are quadrants, and whose three angles are consequently right angles.

  • Turret
  • n.

    The elevated central portion of the roof of a passenger car. Its sides are pierced for light and ventilation.

  • Wagonette
  • n.

    A kind of pleasure wagon, uncovered and with seats extended along the sides, designed to carry six or eight persons besides the driver.

  • Wall-sided
  • a.

    Having sides nearly perpendicular; -- said of certain vessels to distinguish them from those having flaring sides, or sides tumbling home (see under Tumble, v. i.).

  • Undecagon
  • n.

    A figure having eleven angles and eleven sides.

  • Tube-nosed
  • a.

    Having the nostrils prolonged in the form of horny tubes along the sides of the beak; -- said of certain sea birds.

  • Trihedron
  • n.

    A figure having three sides.

  • Trilateral
  • a.

    Having three sides; being three-sided; as, a trilateral triangle.