AI & ChatGPT searches , social queries for GRANGE

What is the name meaning of GRANGE. Phrases containing GRANGE

See name meanings and uses of GRANGE!

AI & ChatGPT search for online names & meanings containing GRANGE

GRANGE

AI search on online names & meanings containing GRANGE

GRANGE

  • Grange
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and French

    Grange

    English and French : topographic name for someone who lived by a granary, from Middle English, Old French grange (Latin granica ‘granary’, ‘barn’, from granum ‘grain’). In some cases, the surname has arisen from places named with this word, for example in Dorset and West Yorkshire in England, and in Ardèche and Jura in France. The Marquis de Lafayette owned a property named Lagrange, and there used to be a place in VT so named in his honor.

  • Grangere
  • Boy/Male

    American, British, English

    Grangere

    Farmer

  • Berwick
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, British, English

    Berwick

    From the Barley Grange

  • Grainger
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Grainger

    English : variant spelling of Granger.

  • Rand
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Rand

    English : from the Middle English personal name Rand(e), a short form of any of the various Germanic compound personal names with the first element rand ‘(shield) rim’, as for example Randolph.English : topographic name for someone who lived on the margin of a settlement or on the bank of a river (from Old English rand ‘rim’, used in a topographical sense), or a habitational name from a place named with this word, as for example Rand in Lincolnshire and Rand Grange in North Yorkshire.German : from a short form of any of the various compound names formed with rand- ‘rim’. Compare 1.German : topographic name from Middle High German, Middle Low German rand, rant ‘edge’, ‘rim’.

  • Bridgham
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bridgham

    English : habitational name, perhaps from a place in Norfolk named Bridgham, from Old English brycg ‘bridge’ + hām ‘homestead’ or hamm ‘enclosure hemmed in by water’, or from Bridgeham Grange in Surrey, which probably has the same origin.

  • Granger
  • Boy/Male

    American, Anglo, British, English, French

    Granger

    Farmer

  • Alton
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Alton

    English : habitational name from any of the many places called Alton, in Derbyshire, Dorset, Hampshire, Leicestershire, Staffordshire, Wiltshire, Worcestershire, and elsewhere. The origin is various: Alton in Derbyshire and Alton Grange in Leicestershire probably have as their first element Old English (e)ald ‘old’. Those in Hampshire, Dorset, and Wiltshire are at the sources of rivers, and are named in Old English as ‘settlement (tūn) at the source (ǣwiell)’. Others derive from various Old English personal names; for example, the one in Staffordshire is formed with an unattested personal name, Ælfa, and one in Worcestershire, Eanulfintun in 1023, is ‘settlement associated with (-ing) Ēanwulf’.

  • Elam
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Elam

    English : habitational name for someone from a place called Elham, in Kent, or a lost place of this name in Crayford, Kent. The first is derived from Old English ǣl ‘eel’ + hām ‘homestead’ or hamm ‘enclosure hemmed in by water’. There is also an Elam Grange in Bingley, West Yorkshire, but the current distribution of the name in the British Isles suggests that it did not contribute significantly to the surname.

  • Barton
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Barton

    English : habitational name from any of the numerous places named with Old English bere or bær ‘barley’ + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’, i.e. an outlying grange. Compare Barwick.German and central European (e.g. Czech and Slovak Bartoň) : from a pet form of the personal name Bartolomaeus (see Bartholomew).

  • Berwyk
  • Boy/Male

    American, British, English

    Berwyk

    From the Barley Grange

  • Granger
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and French

    Granger

    English and French : occupational name for a farm bailiff, responsible for overseeing the collection of rent in kind into the barns and storehouses of the lord of the manor. This official had the Anglo-Norman French title grainger, Old French grangier, from Late Latin granicarius, a derivative of granica ‘granary’ (see Grange).

  • Colpitts
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Colpitts

    English : habitational name, probably from Colpitts Grange, Northumberland, which is named from Old English col ‘(char)coal’ + pytt ‘pit’.

AI search queries for Facebook and twitter posts, hashtags with GRANGE

GRANGE

Follow users with usernames @GRANGE or posting hashtags containing #GRANGE

GRANGE

AI search & ChatGPT queries for Facebook and twitter users, user names, hashtags with GRANGE

GRANGE

Top AI & ChatGPT search, Social media, medium, facebook & news articles containing GRANGE

GRANGE

AI search for Acronyms & meanings containing GRANGE

GRANGE

AI searches, Indeed job searches and job offers containing GRANGE

Other words and meanings similar to

GRANGE

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing GRANGE

GRANGE

  • Grange
  • n.

    A farmhouse of a monastery, where the rents and tithes, paid in grain, were deposited.

  • Granger
  • n.

    A farm steward.

  • Grange
  • n.

    A building for storing grain; a granary.

  • Grangerism
  • n.

    The practice of illustrating a particular book by engravings collected from other books.

  • Grangerize
  • v. t. & i.

    To collect (illustrations from books) for decoration of other books.

  • Granger
  • n.

    A member of a grange.

  • Grange
  • n.

    A farm; generally, a farm with a house at a distance from neighbors.

  • Grange
  • n.

    A farmhouse, with the barns and other buildings for farming purposes.

  • Grange
  • n.

    An association of farmers, designed to further their interests, aud particularly to bring producers and consumers, farmers and manufacturers, into direct commercial relations, without intervention of middlemen or traders. The first grange was organized in 1867.

  • Grangerite
  • n.

    One who collects illustrations from various books for the decoration of one book.