What is the name meaning of HEAPE. Phrases containing HEAPE
See name meanings and uses of HEAPE!HEAPE
HEAPE
Surname or Lastname
English (chiefly Lancashire)
English (chiefly Lancashire) : habitational name from Great or Little Horrocks in Greater Manchester, so named from the plural of the dialect term hurrock ‘heaped-up pile of loose stones or rubbish’ (of uncertain origin).
Boy/Male
Muslim
Heaped sand
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Heap.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from an agent derivative of Middle English strike(n) ‘to stroke, smooth’, applied as an occupational name for someone whose job was to fill level measures of grain by passing a flat stick over the brim of the measure, thus removing any heaped excess.
Boy/Male
Indian
Heaped sand
Surname or Lastname
English (Devon)
English (Devon) : from the rare Old English masculine personal name Mocca, which may be related to a Germanic stem mokk- ‘to accumulate’, ‘to be heaped up’, and hence may originally have been a nickname for a heavy, thickset person. Alternatively, it could be from Middle English mokke ‘trick’, ‘joke’, ‘jest’, ‘act of jeering’, a derivative of mokke(n) ‘to mock’, from Old French moquer.German : variant of Maag.German : nickname for a short, thickset man, Middle High German mocke.Dutch : nickname from Middle Dutch mocke ‘dirty or wanton woman’, ‘slut’, or from West Flemish mokke ‘fat child’.
Surname or Lastname
Irish (especially County Waterford)
Irish (especially County Waterford) : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hÉamhthaigh ‘descendant of Éamhthach’, an adjective meaning ‘swift’.English : habitational name from Heapey in Lancashire, named in Old English as ‘(rose)hip hedge or enclosure’, hēope ‘hip’ + hege ‘hedge’ or gehæg ‘enclosure’.
HEAPE
HEAPE
Boy/Male
Australian, Irish, Scottish
Champion; Form of Neil
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name probably from Ludgate in London, so named from Old English ludgeat ‘back gate’, ‘postern’, or possibly from Ludgate in Kent or Lidgate in Suffolk, both named from Old English hlidgeat ‘swing gate’.
Boy/Male
Australian, British, English
Righteous; Fair
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from places so named in Hampshire, Northumbria, and Norfolk. The first of these is named from Old English Ä’dlingahÄm ‘homestead (Old English hÄm) of the people of Ä’dla’, a personal name derived from a short form of the various compound names with a first element Ä“ad ‘prosperity’, ‘fortune’; the others may have the same origin or incorporate the personal name Ella (see Ellington).
Boy/Male
Basque
Savior.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name for someone from Gatley in Greater Manchester (formerly in Cheshire), recorded in 1290 as Gateclyve, from Old English gÄt ‘goat’ + clif ‘cliff’, ‘bank’.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Divider.
Girl/Female
African
Her father's daughter.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Close; Intimate; Good Friend; Of Good Company
Girl/Female
Indian, Sikh
A Part of Light
HEAPE
HEAPE
HEAPE
HEAPE
HEAPE
n.
A pile of salted fish heaped up to drain.
n.
A mass of bricks heaped up to be burned; or of ore for roasting, or of coal for coking.
a.
Raised into a pile; collected into a crowd; heaped.
n.
A pile of stones heaped up as a landmark, or to arrest attention, as in surveying, or in leaving traces of an exploring party, etc.
n.
An English dry measure, being, at London, 36 bushels heaped up, or its equivalent weight, and more than twice as much at Newcastle. Now used exclusively for coal and coke.
n.
A mass of things heaped together; a heap; as, a pile of stones; a pile of wood.
v. t.
To leave heaped up; to heap up in piles.
n.
That which is heaped together in a mass or conpacted from various sources; a mass formed of fragments; collection; accumulation.
a.
Heaped up; tending to heap up.
v. t.
A single cluster or group of plants growing close together, and having the earth heaped up about them; as, a hill of corn or potatoes.
a.
Heaped, or growing in heaps, or closely compacted clusters.
n.
A side work, made of gabions, fascines, or bags, filled with earth, or of earth heaped up, to afford cover from the flanking fire of an enemy.
n.
One who heaps, piles, or amasses.
imp. & p. p.
of Heap
n.
Anything shaped more or less like a mathematical cone; as, a volcanic cone, a collection of scoriae around the crater of a volcano, usually heaped up in a conical form.