What is the name meaning of BRAMBLE. Phrases containing BRAMBLE
See name meanings and uses of BRAMBLE!BRAMBLE
BRAMBLE
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Old English brēmel, braemel ‘bramble’, ‘blackberry bush’, hence a topographic name for someone who lived by a blackberry thicket or possibly a nickname for a prickly person.English : variant of Bramhall.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place called Heblethwaite in Cumbria, named with Old English hēope ‘rosehip’ or hēopa ‘bramble’ + Old Norse þveit ‘clearing’.
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, Australian, British, English
From the Bramble Bush Spring; From Where the Broom Grows
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the many places called Bromley, in Essex, Hertfordshire, Kent (now in Greater London), Greater London, Greater Manchester, Staffordshire, and elsewhere. Most are named with Old English brÅm ‘broom’ + lÄ“ah ‘woodland clearing’, but Bromley (near Bow) in Greater London is from Old English bræmbel ‘bramble’ + lÄ“ah.
Girl/Female
Biblical
Bitterness of a bramble.
Biblical
bramble of destruction
Girl/Female
Biblical
Bramble, enemy.
Surname or Lastname
English (chiefly Devon)
English (chiefly Devon) : (of Norman origin) habitational name from a place in Calvados, France, named from a Germanic personal name of uncertain form and meaning + Old French ville ‘settlement’.English (chiefly Devon) : habitational name from Glanvill Farm in Devon, Clanville in Somerset and Hampshire, or Clanfield in Hampshire, or from some other place likewise named with Old English clǣne ‘clean’ (i.e. free of brambles and undergrowth) + feld ‘pasture’, ‘open country’ (see Field).
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, Celtic, Chinese, Christian, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Hebrew, Irish, Netherlands, Scottish
Bramble; Raven; Father of Many; He who is High is Father; Irish Form of Abraham; A Thicket of Wild Gorse; Abbreviation of Abraham and Abram
Surname or Lastname
English
English : possibly a variant of Hepple, a habitational name from Hepple in Northumberland, named from Old English hēope ‘rosehip’ or hēopa ‘bramble’ + halh ‘nook’, ‘hollow’.
Girl/Female
Biblical
Bough or bramble of the enemy.
Biblical
bough or bramble of the enemy
Biblical
bramble; enemy
Girl/Female
Biblical
Bramble, enemy.
Boy/Male
English
From the bramble bush spring.
Boy/Male
Biblical
Bramble of destruction.
Girl/Female
Biblical
Bramble-bush, enemy in secret.
Boy/Male
English
From the bramble bush spring.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Bramlett.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name from Middle English hose, huse ‘brambles’, ‘thorns’.English : habitational name from a place in Leicestershire, named from Old English hÅs, plural of hÅh ‘spur of land’ (literally ‘heel’), or a topographic name with the same meaning.English and German : metonymic occupational name from Middle English, Middle Low and High German hose ‘hose’, ‘leggings’, denoting a knitter or seller of hose, or a nickname for someone who habitually wore noticeble legwear.German (Upper Saxony) : apparently from a Czech personal name, Hos, a reduced form of Johannes (see John).
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BRAMBLE
n.
The European mountain finch (Fringilla montifringilla); -- called also bramble finch and bramble.
n.
A prickle growing on the bark, as in some brambles and roses.
n.
The thimble-shaped fruit of the Rubus Idaeus and other similar brambles; as, the black, the red, and the white raspberry.
a.
Full of brakes; abounding with brambles, shrubs, or ferns; rough; thorny.
n.
Any plant of the genus Rubus, including the raspberry and blackberry. Hence: Any rough, prickly shrub.
n.
A thicket; a place overgrown with shrubs and brambles, with undergrowth and ferns, or with canes.
n.
The brambling or bramble finch.
n.
The fruit of certain species of bramble (Rubus); in England, the fruit of R. caesius, which has a glaucous bloom; in America, that of R. canadensis and R. hispidus, species of low blackberries.
a.
Overgrown with brambles.
n.
The fruit of several species of bramble (Rubus); also, the plant itself. Rubus fruticosus is the blackberry of England; R. villosus and R. Canadensis are the high blackberry and low blackberry of the United States. There are also other kinds.
n.
An almost impenetrable thicket or succession of thickets of thorny shrubs and brambles.
a.
Of or pertaining to a natural order of plants (Rosaceae) of which the rose is the type. It includes also the plums and cherries, meadowsweet, brambles, the strawberry, the hawthorn, applies, pears, service trees, and quinces.
a.
Pertaining to, resembling, or full of, brambles.