What is the name meaning of BRANTON. Phrases containing BRANTON
See name meanings and uses of BRANTON!BRANTON
BRANTON
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from places called Branton in South Yorkshire (formerly in West Yorkshire) and Northumberland or from Braunton in Devon. The first and last are named with Old English brÅm ‘broom’ + tÅ«n ‘farmstead’, ‘settlement’. The second is from an Old English word brÄ“men ‘overgrown with broom’ + tÅ«n ‘farmstead’.
Boy/Male
English
Mohawk Indian Joseph Brant was a renowned strategist who fought for the British during the...
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English
Proud
BRANTON
BRANTON
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Sweet
Boy/Male
Hindu
Lord Vishnu
Girl/Female
Indian, Sanskrit
Story; Narration
Boy/Male
Scandinavian Scottish
Church.
Boy/Male
Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Punjabi, Sikh
Family Deity
Girl/Female
Hindu
Bristi, Barsha
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
King of the Moon
Girl/Female
Australian, Biblical
Noise; Tumult
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim, Persian
Resplendent; Dazzling
Surname or Lastname
English and Dutch
English and Dutch : from Latin Marcus, the personal name of St. Mark the Evangelist, author of the second Gospel. The name was borne also by a number of other early Christian saints. Marcus was an old Roman name, of uncertain (possibly non-Italic) etymology; it may have some connection with the name of the war god Mars. Compare Martin. The personal name was not as popular in England in the Middle Ages as it was on the Continent, especially in Italy, where the evangelist became the patron of Venice and the Venetian Republic, and was allegedly buried at Aquileia. As an American family name, this has absorbed cognate and similar names from other European languages, including Greek Markos and Slavic Marek.English, German, and Dutch (van der Mark) : topographic name for someone who lived on a boundary between two districts, from Middle English merke, Middle High German marc, Middle Dutch marke, merke, all meaning ‘borderland’. The German term also denotes an area of fenced-off land (see Marker 5) and, like the English word, is embodied in various place names which have given rise to habitational names.English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Marck, Pas-de-Calais.German : from Marko, a short form of any of the Germanic compound personal names formed with mark ‘borderland’ as the first element, for example Markwardt.Americanization or shortened form of any of several like-sounding Jewish or Slavic surnames (see for example Markow, Markowitz, Markovich).Irish (northeastern Ulster) : probably a short form of Markey (when not of English origin).
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