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TYNE

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TYNE

  • Tyne
  • Girl/Female

    English

    Tyne

    River.

  • Hensell
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hensell

    English : habitational name from Hensall in North Yorkshire, originally named with the unattested Old English personal name Heþīn or Old Scandinavian Heþinn + Old English halh ‘nook’.English : Huguenot surname, of unexplained origin, which was taken to England by a Protestant refugee who fled France after the Massacre of St. Bartholomew’s Day (24 August 1572) and settled in Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

  • Killingsworth
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Killingsworth

    English : habitational name probably from Killingworth in Tyne and Wear, so named from an Old English personal name Cylla + -ing- ‘associated with’ + worð ‘enclosure’.

  • Pennywell
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Pennywell

    English : habitational name from Pennywell in Tyne and Wear or from a similarly named lost place elsewhere.

  • Southwick
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Southwick

    English : habitational name from any of a number of places so called, for example in Tyne and Wear, Northamptonshire, and Hampshire, named in Old English with sūþ ‘south’ + wīc ‘dwelling’, ‘dairy farm’.

  • Swalwell
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (County Durham)

    Swalwell

    English (County Durham) : habitational name from a place so named in Tyne and Wear.

  • Bladen
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bladen

    English : habitational name from Bladon in Oxfordshire or Blaydon in Tyne and Wear (formerly in County Durham). The first takes its name from a pre-English name (of uncertain origin and meaning) of the Evenlode river; the second is named with Old Norse blár ‘cold’ + Old English dūn ‘hill’.

  • Bicker
  • Surname or Lastname

    Dutch and German

    Bicker

    Dutch and German : occupational name for a stonemason or someone who used or made pickaxes or chisel, from bicke ‘pickaxe’, ‘chisel’ + the agent suffix -er. Compare Bick.English : occupational name for a beekeeper, Middle English biker (from Old English bīcere). Bees were important in medieval England because their honey provided the only means of sweetening food (sugar being a more recent importation); honey was also used in preserving.English : habitational name from Bicker in Lincolnshire or Byker in Tyne and Wear, both named with the Old English preposition bī ‘by’, ‘beside’ + Old Norse kjarr ‘wet ground’, ‘brushwood’.Cars Bicker was a wealthy merchant and one of the commissioners to New Netherland under the West India Company’s 1621 charter.

  • Tindall
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Tindall

    English : regional name for someone who lived in Tynedale, the valley of the river Tyne, or a habitational name from a place in Cumbria called Tindale, which is situated on a tributary of the South Tyne. The name derives from a British river name Tina (apparently from a Celtic root meaning ‘to flow’) + Old English dæl or Old Norse dalr ‘valley’.

  • Tyne
  • Surname or Lastname

    Irish

    Tyne

    Irish : reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Teimhin ‘descendant of Teimhean’, from teimhean ‘dark’, an adjective from teimhe ‘dusk’, ‘darkness’.English : probably a habitational name for someone from Tyneside in northeast England.

  • Colebank
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Cumbria)

    Colebank

    English (Cumbria) : habitational name, possibly from either of two places named Coal Bank, in Tyne and Wear and Durham.

  • Tynet
  • Girl/Female

    Greek

    Tynet

    Crowned in victory.

  • Tine
  • Surname or Lastname

    Italian (Sicily; Tinè)

    Tine

    Italian (Sicily; Tinè) : most probably an occupational name for a comb maker, from a reduced form of medieval Greek kteneas, from ktenion ‘comb’ + the occupational suffix -eas.English (mainly Yorkshire) : variant of Tyne.Perhaps also an Americanized spelling of German Thein.

  • Newborn
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Newborn

    English : habitational name from Newbourn in Suffolk or Newburn in Tyne and Wear (formerly part of Northumberland), both named with Old English nīwe ‘new’ + burna ‘stream’, perhaps denoting a stream that had changed its course.Possibly an Americanized form of German Neugebo(h)ren, Neugeborn (a nickname meaning ‘newborn’).

  • Longacre
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Longacre

    English : topographic name from Middle English lang, long ‘long’ + aker, acre ‘piece of tilled land’, or a habitational name from any of various minor places so named, such as Long Acre Farm, Tyne and Wear, or Long Acres Farm in North Yorkshire.

  • Burden
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly West Country)

    Burden

    English (chiefly West Country) : (of Norman origin) from the Old French personal name Burdo (oblique case Burdon), probably of Germanic origin, but uncertain meaning.English (chiefly West Country) : nickname for a pilgrim or one who carried a pilgrim’s staff, Middle English, Old French bourdon.English (chiefly West Country) : habitational name from any of various places called Burdon or Burden. Burden in West Yorkshire and Great Burdon in County Durham are named with Old English burh ‘stronghold’, ‘fortified place’ + dūn ‘hill’; Burdon in Tyne and Wear is named with Old English b̄re ‘byre’ + denu ‘valley’.

  • Tyner
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Tyner

    English : unexplained.

  • Collingwood
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Collingwood

    English : habitational name, probably from Collingwood in Staffordshire, although the surname is now more common on Tyneside. The place name arose from a wood the ownership of which was disputed (from Middle English calenge ‘dispute’, ‘challenge’).

  • Washington
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Washington

    English : habitational name from either of the places called Washington, in Tyne and Wear and West Sussex. The latter is from Old English Wassingatūn ‘settlement (Old English tūn) of the people of Wassa’, a personal name that is probably a short form of some compound name such as Wāðsige, composed of the elements wāð ‘hunt’ + sige ‘victory’. Washington in Tyne and Wear is from Old English Wassingtūn ‘settlement associated with Wassa’.George Washington (1732–99), 1st president of the U.S. (1789–97), was born at Bridges Creek, VA. His great-grandfather had settled in the colony after emigrating from England in 1658. With the passage of time, the surname has come to be borne by more African Americans than English Americans. A prominent example was the educator Booker T. Washington (1856–1915), born a slave in VA, who adopted his surname from his stepfather, Washington Ferguson.

  • Tyne
  • Girl/Female

    American, British, English, Jamaican

    Tyne

    A River in England; River

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TYNE

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TYNE

Online names & meanings

  • Aakanksh
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Aakanksh

    Hope

  • Preethu
  • Boy/Male

    Bengali, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Telugu

    Preethu

    Gift of Love; God Gift

  • Sigfriede
  • Girl/Female

    German

    Sigfriede

    Victorious

  • Kulbir
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Kulbir

    Brave Family

  • Chap
  • Boy/Male

    English

    Chap

    Peddler; merchant.

  • Agnello
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Italian, Kannada

    Agnello

    Angel

  • MATTHIEU
  • Male

    French

    MATTHIEU

    Variant spelling of French Mathieu, MATTHIEU means "gift of God."

  • Paladin
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Marathi

    Paladin

    Fighter

  • SÍNE
  • Female

    Irish

    SÍNE

    Irish Gaelic form of Anglo-Norman French Jehane, SÍNE means "God is gracious."

  • Abdul Alim |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Abdul Alim |

    Servant of the all-knowing, Servant of the omniscient

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TYNE

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TYNE

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TYNE

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Other words and meanings similar to

TYNE

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing TYNE

TYNE

  • Tyne
  • n.

    A prong or point of an antler.

  • Tyne
  • v. i.

    To become lost; to perish.

  • Tyne
  • n.

    Anxiety; tine.

  • Tres-tyne
  • n.

    In the antler of a stag, the third tyne above the base. This tyne appears in the third year. In those deer in which the brow tyne does not divide, the tres-tyne is the second tyne above the base. See Illust. under Rucervine, and under Rusine.

  • Tyne
  • v. t.

    To lose.

  • Point
  • n.

    A tyne or snag of an antler.

  • Royal
  • n.

    One of the upper or distal branches of an antler, as the third and fourth tynes of the antlers of a stag.