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  • Maxfield
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (South Yorkshire)

    Maxfield

    English (South Yorkshire) : habitational name from Maxfield in Sussex, or Maxfield Plain in North Yorkshire.

  • Jaggers
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (West Yorkshire)

    Jaggers

    English (West Yorkshire) : variant of Jagger.

  • Lobley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Yorkshire)

    Lobley

    English (Yorkshire) : habitational name from Lobley Gate in West Yorkshire.

  • Lofthouse
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Yorkshire)

    Lofthouse

    English (Yorkshire) : habitational name from a place in West Yorkshire called Lofthouse (see Loftus).Americanized form of the Norwegian cognate Lofthus.

  • Ingham
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly Yorkshire and Lancashire)

    Ingham

    English (chiefly Yorkshire and Lancashire) : habitational name from any of several places so called, of which the largest are in Lincolnshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk. The place name is from the Old English personal name Inga + hām ‘homestead’. Some authorities believe the first element to be a word meaning ‘the Inguione’, from an ancient Germanic tribe known as the Inguiones.

  • Loftus
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Yorkshire)

    Loftus

    English (Yorkshire) : habitational name from Loftus in Cleveland, Lofthouse in West Yorkshire, or Loftsome in East Yorkshire. All are named from Old Norse lopt ‘loft’, ‘upper storey’ + hús ‘house’, the last being derived from the dative plural form, húsum. Houses built with an upper storey (which was normally used for the storage of produce during the winter) were a considerable rarity among the ordinary people of the Middle Ages.Irish : English surname adopted by certain bearers of the Gaelic surname Ó Lochlainn (see Laughlin) or Ó Lachtnáin (see Lough).

  • Leadley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (North Yorkshire)

    Leadley

    English (North Yorkshire) : habitational name, apparently from Leathley in North Yorkshire, so named from Old English hlith ‘slope’ (genitive plural hleotha) + lēah ‘woodland clearing’.

  • Mangham
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (South Yorkshire)

    Mangham

    English (South Yorkshire) : habitational name from Manningham near Bradford, recorded in the 13th century as Maingham.

  • Longley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly Nottinghamshire and South Yorkshire)

    Longley

    English (mainly Nottinghamshire and South Yorkshire) : variant of Langley.

  • Metcalf
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Yorkshire)

    Metcalf

    English (Yorkshire) : of uncertain origin, probably from Middle English metecalf ‘food calf’, i.e. a calf being fattened up for eating at the end of the summer. It is thus either an occupational name for a herdsman or slaughterer, or a nickname for a sleek and plump individual, from the same word in a transferred sense. The variants in med- appear early, and suggest that the first element was associated by folk etymology with Middle English mead ‘meadow’, ‘pasture’.

  • Longbottom
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (West Yorkshire)

    Longbottom

    English (West Yorkshire) : topographic name for someone who lived in a long valley, from Middle English long + botme, bothem ‘valley bottom’. Given the surname’s present-day distribution, Longbottom in Luddenden Foot, West Yorkshire, may be the origin, but there are also two places called Long Bottom in Hampshire, two in Wiltshire, and Longbottom Farm in Somerset and in Wiltshire.

  • Leatham
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (West Yorkshire)

    Leatham

    English (West Yorkshire) : variant of Latham.

  • Jagger
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (West Yorkshire)

    Jagger

    English (West Yorkshire) : occupational name from Middle English jagger ‘carter’, ‘peddler’, an agent derivative of Middle English jag ‘pack’, ‘load’ (of unknown origin). All or most present-day bearers of this surname are probably members of a single family, which originally came from Staniland in the parish of Halifax. During the 16th century it spread through the Calder valley, and from there to other parts of England.

  • Iveson
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Yorkshire)

    Iveson

    English (Yorkshire) : patronymic from the Old French personal name Ive.

  • Keedy
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Durham and North Yorkshire)

    Keedy

    English (Durham and North Yorkshire) : unexplained; perhaps an altered spelling of Scottish and northern Irish Keddy.Irish : variant spelling of Keady.

  • Legard
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Yorkshire)

    Legard

    English (Yorkshire) : from a Norman female personal name, Legard, derived from the Germanic name Liutgard (borne by Charlemagne’s wife), composed of the elements liut ‘people’, ‘tribe’ + gard ‘enclosure’.French : metonymic occupational name for a gardener, or status name for someone who owned garden, from Old French gard ‘garden’ with the definite article le.

  • Littlewood
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly Yorkshire)

    Littlewood

    English (chiefly Yorkshire) : habitational name from any of several minor places so called, mostly in West Yorkshire, Littlewood in Wooldale being a well-recorded instance. They are named with Old English l̄tel ‘small’ + wudu ‘wood’.

  • Laycock
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly Yorkshire)

    Laycock

    English (chiefly Yorkshire) : habitational name from Laycock in West Yorkshire or possibly from Lacock in Wiltshire. Both are recorded in Domesday Book as Lacoc and seem to be named with a diminutive of Old English lacu ‘stream’.

  • Lindsley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Durham and Yorkshire)

    Lindsley

    English (Durham and Yorkshire) : unexplained; perhaps an altered form of Lindley.

  • Leather
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly Lancashire and Yorkshire)

    Leather

    English (chiefly Lancashire and Yorkshire) : metonymic occupational name for a leatherworker or seller of leather goods, from Middle English lether, Old English leþer ‘leather’.

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YORKS

  • Dialect
  • n.

    The form of speech of a limited region or people, as distinguished from ether forms nearly related to it; a variety or subdivision of a language; speech characterized by local peculiarities or specific circumstances; as, the Ionic and Attic were dialects of Greece; the Yorkshire dialect; the dialect of the learned.

  • Hutchunsonian
  • n.

    A follower of John Hutchinson of Yorkshire, England, who believed that the Hebrew Scriptures contained a complete system of natural science and of theology.

  • Coble
  • n.

    A flat-floored fishing boat with a lug sail, and a drop rudder extending from two to four feet below the keel. It was originally used on the stormy coast of Yorkshire, England.

  • Shire
  • n.

    A portion of Great Britain originally under the supervision of an earl; a territorial division, usually identical with a county, but sometimes limited to a smaller district; as, Wiltshire, Yorkshire, Richmondshire, Hallamshire.

  • Terrier
  • n.

    One of a breed of small dogs, which includes several distinct subbreeds, some of which, such as the Skye terrier and Yorkshire terrier, have long hair and drooping ears, while others, at the English and the black-and-tan terriers, have short, close, smooth hair and upright ears.

  • Yorkshire
  • n.

    A county in the north of England.

  • Wapentake
  • n.

    In some northern counties of England, a division, or district, answering to the hundred in other counties. Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, and Nottinghamshire are divided into wapentakes, instead of hundreds.