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BROW

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BROW

  • Brown
  • Boy/Male

    English American

    Brown

    Brown (colour name).

  • Brownell
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brownell

    English : habitational name from any of various places called Brownell, for example in Yorkshire, Cheshire, and Staffordshire, from Old English brūn ‘brown’ + hyll ‘hill’.Thomas Brownell came from England to Little Compton, RI, in about 1650.

  • Dunn
  • Surname or Lastname

    Irish

    Dunn

    Irish : reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Duinn, Ó Doinn ‘descendant of Donn’, a byname meaning ‘brown-haired’ or ‘chieftain’.English : nickname for a man with dark hair or a swarthy complexion, from Middle English dunn ‘dark-colored’.Scottish : habitational name from Dun in Angus, named with Gaelic dùn ‘fort’.Scottish : nickname from Gaelic donn ‘brown’. Compare 1.

  • Brownley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brownley

    English : variant of Brownlee.

  • Kapila | கபிலா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Kapila | கபிலா

    Yellowish brown coloured, Name of the celestial cow

  • Manning
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manning

    English : patronymic from Mann 1 and 2.Irish : adopted as an English equivalent of Gaelic Ó Mainnín ‘descendant of Mainnín’, probably an assimilated form of Mainchín, a diminutive of manach ‘monk’. This is the name of a chieftain family in Connacht. It is sometimes pronounced Ó Maingín and Anglicized as Mangan.Anstice Manning, widow of Richard Manning of Dartmouth, England, came to MA with her children in 1679. Her great-great-grandson Robert, born at Salem, MA, in 1784, was the uncle and protector of author Nathaniel Hawthorne. Another early bearer of the relatively common British name was Jeffrey Manning, one of the earliest settlers in Piscataway township, Middlesex Co., NJ. His great-grandson James Manning (1738–91) was a founder and the first president of Rhode Island College (Brown University).

  • Brownfield
  • Surname or Lastname

    Jewish (American)

    Brownfield

    Jewish (American) : Americanized form of an ornamental compound, Braunfeld, from German braun ‘brown’ + Feld ‘field’.English : variant of Broomfield.

  • Maliha
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Maliha

    Strong, Beautiful, Salty or graceful or brownish color

  • Brownrigg
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brownrigg

    English : habitational name from any of several places in Cumbria named Brownrigg, from Old English brūn ‘brown’ + hrycg ‘ridge’.

  • Brow
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brow

    English : either a descriptive nickname for someone with bushy or otherwise distinctive eyebrows, from Middle English browe ‘eyebrow’, ‘eyelid’ (Old English brū), but, more likely, a topographic name for someone who lived at the brow of a hill from a transferred use of the same word; surnames of the type de la Browe are recorded from the end of the 13th century.Americanized spelling of French Braud.Americanized spelling of Dutch Brouw, an occupational name for a brewer, from a derivative of Middle High Dutch brouwen ‘to brew’.

  • Browning
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Browning

    English : from the Middle English and Old English personal name Brūning, originally a patronymic from the byname Brūn (see Brown).This name was brought independently to North America from England by numerous different bearers from the 17th century onward. William Browning was one of the free planters who assented to the ‘Fundamental Agreement’ of the New Haven Colony on June 4, 1639.

  • Brownson
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brownson

    English : variant of Brunson.John Brownson or Bronson was one of the original settlers of Hartford, CT, in 1635.

  • Hector
  • Surname or Lastname

    Scottish

    Hector

    Scottish : Anglicized form of the Gaelic personal name Eachann (earlier Eachdonn, already confused with Norse Haakon), composed of the elements each ‘horse’ + donn ‘brown’.English : found in Yorkshire and Scotland, where it may derive directly from the medieval personal name. According to medieval legend, Britain derived its name from being founded by Brutus, a Trojan exile, and Hector was occasionally chosen as a personal name, as it was the name of the Trojan king’s eldest son. The classical Greek name, Hektōr, is probably an agent derivative of Greek ekhein ‘to hold back’, ‘hold in check’, hence ‘protector of the city’.German, French, and Dutch : from the personal name (see 2 above). In medieval Germany, this was a fairly popular personal name among the nobility, derived from classical literature. It is a comparatively rare surname in France.

  • Dunstan
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Dunstan

    English : from a Middle English personal name Dunstan, composed of Old English dunn ‘dark’, ‘brown’ + stān ‘stone’. This name was borne by a 10th-century archbishop of Canterbury who was later canonized.English : habitational name from Dunstone in Devon, named from Old English Dunstānestūn ‘settlement of Dunstan’ (as in 1). The surname is still chiefly common in Devon, but there are places in other parts of the country with similar names but different etymologies (e.g. Dunstan in Northumbria, Dunston in Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Staffordshire, and Derbyshire), which may possibly have contributed to the surname.Scottish : partly perhaps the same as 1, but there is a place named Dunstane in Roxburghshire, which may also be a source of the surname.

  • Gunn
  • Surname or Lastname

    Scottish

    Gunn

    Scottish : name of a clan associated with Caithness, derived from the Old Norse personal name Gunnr (or the feminine form Gunne), a short form of any of various compound names with the first element gunn ‘battle’.Scottish : sometimes an Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Gille Dhuinn ‘son of the servant of the brown one’ (see Dunn). (According to Woulfe a name of the same form also existed in Sligo, Ireland.)English : metonymic occupational name for someone who operated a siege engine or cannon, perhaps also a nickname for a forceful person, from Middle English gunne, gonne ‘ballista’, ‘cannon’, ‘gun’. The term originated as a humorous application of the Scandinavian female personal name Gunne or Gunnhildr.

  • Brown
  • Boy/Male

    British, Chinese, English, German

    Brown

    Brown; Colour Name; Russet-complected

  • Brownlow
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brownlow

    English : habitational name from places in Greater Manchester, Cheshire, and Staffordshire named Brownlow, all probably from Old English brūn ‘brown’ + Old English hlāw ‘hill’, ‘mound’.

  • Rishap | ரீஷாப
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Rishap | ரீஷாப

    Yellowish brown eyed

  • Mackley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Mackley

    English : habitational name from Mackley in Derbyshire, which may have been named in Old English as ‘Macca’s forest’, from an unattested personal name + lēah ‘woodland clearing’, ‘glade’.Scottish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Donnshleibhe ‘son of Donnshleibhe’, a personal name literally meaning ‘brown hill’.Probably also an Americanized form of German Mä(g)gli (see Magley).

  • Brownridge
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brownridge

    English : variant of Brownrigg.

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BROW

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BROW

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BROW

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BROW

  • Browsing
  • n.

    Browse; also, a place abounding with shrubs where animals may browse.

  • Brown
  • v. i.

    To become brown.

  • Browsing
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Browse

  • Brownian
  • a.

    Pertaining to Dr. Robert Brown, who first demonstrated (about 1827) the commonness of the motion described below.

  • Browning
  • n.

    The act or operation of giving a brown color, as to gun barrels, etc.

  • Seal-brown
  • a.

    Of a rich dark brown color, like the fur of the fur seal after it is dyed.

  • Nut-brown
  • a.

    Brown as a nut long kept and dried.

  • Browning
  • n.

    A smooth coat of brown mortar, usually the second coat, and the preparation for the finishing coat of plaster.

  • Brownism
  • n.

    The views or teachings of Robert Brown of the Brownists.

  • Browsed
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Browse

  • Browsewood
  • n.

    Shrubs and bushes upon which animals browse.

  • Brown
  • v. t.

    To give a bright brown color to, as to gun barrels, by forming a thin coat of oxide on their surface.

  • Brownness
  • n.

    The quality or state of being brown.

  • Brownish
  • a.

    Somewhat brown.

  • Brownist
  • n.

    A follower of Robert Brown, of England, in the 16th century, who taught that every church is complete and independent in itself when organized, and consists of members meeting in one place, having full power to elect and depose its officers.

  • Hair-brown
  • a.

    Of a clear tint of brown, resembling brown human hair. It is composed of equal proportions of red and green.

  • Browser
  • n.

    An animal that browses.

  • Browny
  • a.

    Brown or, somewhat brown.

  • Whity-brown
  • a.

    Of a color between white and brown.