What is the name meaning of BALTHROP. Phrases containing BALTHROP
See name meanings and uses of BALTHROP!BALTHROP
BALTHROP
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a lost place, probably in Cambridgeshire, where the surname is recorded in the 17th century. The second element of the place name is a metathesized form of Old English þorp ‘settlement’; the first element is of uncertain origin. The surname is now extinct in the British Isles.William Baltrop, Baldrop, or Boltrop came to VA from England in about 1664.
BALTHROP
BALTHROP
Girl/Female
Indian
Goddess Lakshmi
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Serpent Eyed
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Christian, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Indian, Irish, Norse, Scandinavian, Swedish, Teutonic
Little Raven; Fiery Hill; Burning; Sword-blade; Beacon on the Hill; Feminine of Brendan; Sword; Torch; Flame
Girl/Female
English Scottish
meaning from Lorraine.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Godley.Probably also an Americanized spelling of South German and Swiss German Gütle (or the variants Güttly and Gütler), a status name for a smallholder (see Goodlin).
Boy/Male
Shakespearean
Antony and Cleopatra'. Friend to Mark Antony.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : nickname or occupational name for someone who hunted hares, or who was thought to resemble a breed of dog used in hunting hares.English and Scottish : nickname for someone thought to resemble a harrier, a kind of hawk, Middle English harrower.English and Scottish : nickname for a raider or plunderer, from an agent noun derived from Middle English herian, Old English her(g)ian ‘to harry’, ‘plunder’, ‘ravage’.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Perfect, Complete, Godly
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, and Irish (of Norman origin)
English, Scottish, and Irish (of Norman origin) : of disputed origin. It may be from a Celtic personal name derived from the element cam ‘bent’, ‘crooked’ (compare Cameron and Campbell). This was relatively frequent in Norfolk, Lincolnshire, and Yorkshire in the 12th and 13th centuries, perhaps as a result of Breton immigration. According to another theory it is a habitational name from Comines near Lille, but there is no evidence for this (no early forms with de have been found). In southern Ireland this Anglo-Norman name has been confused with 2.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac CuimÃn (or Ó CuimÃn) ‘son (or ‘descendant’) of CuimÃn’, a personal name formed from a diminutive of cam ‘crooked’.Americanized form of French Canadian Vien, Viens, based on the misconception that these derive from French venire ‘to come’.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Name of Jain
BALTHROP
BALTHROP
BALTHROP
BALTHROP
BALTHROP