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BUCKLE

  • Billiter
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Billiter

    English : occupational name for a bell-founder, Middle English belleyetere, from Old English belle + gēotere. It is unlikely that there would have been enough work to keep anyone employed exclusively in making bells, and there is evidence that bell makers were general founders, engaged for the most part in making smaller domestic items, such as pots and buckles.

  • Buckle
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Buckle

    English : metonymic occupational name for a maker of buckles, from Middle English bokel ‘buckle’.Americanized spelling of German Buckel.

  • Buckley
  • Boy/Male

    Irish English

    Buckley

    Boy.

  • Zin
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical, British, English

    Zin

    Buckler; Coldness

  • Buckels
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Buckels

    English : variant of Buckle.German : patronymic from Buckel.

  • Buckel
  • Surname or Lastname

    German

    Buckel

    German : from a pet form of the personal name Burkhart.German : descriptive nickname for a person with a hunchback.Possibly a German metonymic occupational name for a metalworker, from Middle High German buckel ‘(embossed) buckle on a shield’.English : variant spelling of Buckle.

  • Caphtor
  • Biblical

    Caphtor

    a sphere, buckle, or hand

  • Zin
  • Biblical

    Zin

    buckler; coldness

  • Pelham
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly Sussex)

    Pelham

    English (mainly Sussex) : habitational name from Pelham in Hertfordshire, so called from the Old English personal name Pēotla + Old English hām ‘homestead’.The manor of Pelham in Hertfordshire, England, was held by Walter de Pelham in the reign of Edward I (1272–1307). His descendants became constables of Pevensey Castle, Sussex, and were so influential that their badge, the buckle, is seen in at least eleven of the county’s churches, and as a decoration on iron chimney-backs in Sussex farmhouses. Various branches of the family were ennobled and their titles include earl of Chichester and earl of Yarborough. The family also once held the dukedom of Newcastle and the marquessate of Clare. Peter Pelham (b. c. 1695), an engraver, emigrated to Boston after 1728, and was stepfather to the artist John Singleton Copley.

  • Buckler
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Buckler

    English : occupational name for a maker of buckles, Middle English bokeler, Old French bouclier (see Buckle).Americanized spelling of German Büchler (see Buechler).

  • Buckles
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Buckles

    English : variant of Buckle.

  • Cappadocia
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical Latin

    Cappadocia

    A sphere, buckle, or hand.

  • Targett
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Targett

    English : variant of Taggart.Possibly an altered spelling of French Target, a nickname for someone who carried a square buckler, Old French targe.

  • Buckley
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Buckley

    English : habitational name from any of the many places so named, most of which are from Old English bucc ‘buck’, ‘male deer’ or bucca ‘he-goat’ + lēah ‘woodland clearing’. Places called Buckley and Buckleigh, in Devon, are named with Old English boga ‘bow’ + clif ‘cliff’.English : possibly a variant of Bulkley, from the local pronunciation.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Buachalla ‘descendant of Buachaill’, a byname meaning ‘cowherd’, ‘servant’, ‘boy’.Altered spelling of German Büchler (see Buechler), or of Büchle, a variant of Buechel.

  • Buckley
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, British, English, Irish

    Buckley

    Deer Meadow; Male Goat; Deer; Place Name; Meadow of the Deer; Boy

  • Caphtor
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical

    Caphtor

    A sphere, buckle, or hand.

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BUCKLE

  • Keeper
  • n.

    A ring, strap, clamp, or any device for holding an object in place; as: (a) The box on a door jamb into which the bolt of a lock protrudes, when shot. (b) A ring serving to keep another ring on the finger. (c) A loop near the buckle of a strap to receive the end of the strap.

  • Scutate
  • a.

    Buckler-shaped; round or nearly round.

  • Buckle
  • n.

    To fasten or confine with a buckle or buckles; as, to buckle a harness.

  • Scutiferous
  • a.

    Carrying a shield or buckler.

  • Pick
  • n.

    A pike or spike; the sharp point fixed in the center of a buckler.

  • Shield
  • n.

    A broad piece of defensive armor, carried on the arm, -- formerly in general use in war, for the protection of the body. See Buckler.

  • Buckled
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Buckle

  • Target
  • n.

    A kind of small shield or buckler, used as a defensive weapon in war.

  • Tongue
  • n.

    A projection, or slender appendage or fixture; as, the tongue of a buckle, or of a balance.

  • Unbuckle
  • v. t.

    To loose the buckles of; to unfasten; as, to unbuckle a shoe.

  • Chape
  • n.

    The piece by which an object is attached to something, as the frog of a scabbard or the metal loop at the back of a buckle by which it is fastened to a strap.

  • Buckler
  • n.

    A block of wood or plate of iron made to fit a hawse hole, or the circular opening in a half-port, to prevent water from entering when the vessel pitches.

  • Buckler
  • v. t.

    To shield; to defend.

  • Tang
  • n.

    The tongue of a buckle.

  • Matachin
  • n.

    An old dance with swords and bucklers; a sword dance.

  • Buckler-headed
  • a.

    Having a head like a buckler.

  • Turn-buckle
  • n.

    A gravitating catch, as for fastening a shutter, the end of a chain, or a hasp.

  • Infibulation
  • n.

    The act of clasping, or fastening, as with a buckle or padlock.

  • Tab
  • n.

    The flap or latchet of a shoe fastened with a string or a buckle.

  • Turn-buckle
  • n.

    A loop or sleeve with a screw thread at one end and a swivel at the other, -- used for tightening a rod, stay, etc.