What is the name meaning of HILLHOUSE. Phrases containing HILLHOUSE
See name meanings and uses of HILLHOUSE!HILLHOUSE
HILLHOUSE
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived at a house on a hill, Middle English hill + hus.Scottish and northern Irish : habitational name from any of several minor places so called in Ayrshire.Rev. James Hillhouse, the first minister of Montville, CT, came to America from Co. Londonderry, Ireland, about 1720. His grandson James Hillhouse was a Federalist congressman from CT and treasurer of Yale College from 1782 to 1832.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Hills.English : variant of Hillhouse. In the British Isles, this name is now most frequent in northern Ireland and Scotland.
Surname or Lastname
North German and Frisian
North German and Frisian : patronymic from Hiller 3.English : variant of Hillhouse.
HILLHOUSE
HILLHOUSE
Girl/Female
Assamese, Bengali, British, Christian, Danish, English, French, German, Greek, Gujarati, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Latin, Malayalam, Marathi, Polish, Sindhi, Swedish, Tamil, Telugu
Tower; Dark; Name of a River; Honey; Raspberry; Woman from Magdala; From the High Tower
Boy/Male
Arabic
Tall.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : variant of Dickens.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Telugu
Goddess Durga
Surname or Lastname
German
German : from Middle High German lins(e) ‘lentil’, presumably a metonymic occupational nickname for a grower of lentils.German : from a short form of a Germanic personal name formed with Old High German lint ‘snake’ or linta ‘linden tree’, ‘shield’.English (Staffordshire) : unexplained. Possibly a variant of Lynes.Latvian : possibly from lins ‘flax’.
Biblical
Sallu, an exaltation; a basket
Surname or Lastname
English
English : descriptive nickname for a giant or a large man, from Middle English golias ‘giant’, from the Hebrew personal name Golyat Goliath. In the Bible Goliath was the champion of the Philistines, who stood ‘six cubits and a span’; he was defeated in single combat by the shepherd boy David (I Samuel 17), who killed him with a stone from his sling. There is unlikely to be any connection with the English vocabulary word gully (from Old French goulet ‘neck of a bottle’), which is not attested in this sense before the 17th century.Perhaps an altered spelling of French Goulley, a variant of Goulet.
Boy/Male
Indian
The World
Male
Greek
(ΖοÏοβάβελ) Greek form of Hebrew Zerubbabel, ZOROBABEL means "born at Babylon" or "scattered to Babylon." In the bible, this is the name of the leader of the first of the returning exiles.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Blue lotus
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