What is the name meaning of HUTTON. Phrases containing HUTTON
See name meanings and uses of HUTTON!HUTTON
HUTTON
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English
From the Settlement on the Bluff
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Wansley in Devon, named with the Old English personal name Want + lēah ‘woodland clearing’, or from Hutton Wandesley in North Yorkshire, named with an unattested Old English personal name (Wand or Wandel) + lēah. The latter seems the more likely source, the surname having been concentrated in Lancashire in the late 19th century. Today there are few if any bearers of the surname in the U.K.
Boy/Male
English
From the estate on the ridge.
HUTTON
HUTTON
Girl/Female
Teutonic German
Intelligent.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Light
Girl/Female
Tamil
Pernita | பேரà¯à®¨à¯€à®¤à®¾
Answered prayer
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Hessay in York, named from Old English hæsel ‘hazel(tree)’ + sǣ ‘marshland’ or ēg ‘island’.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian, Danish, Hebrew, Muslim
Precious Gem
Surname or Lastname
English
English : regional name from the county of Cornwall, which is named with the Old English tribal name Cornwealas. This is from Kernow (the term that the Cornish used to refer to themselves, a word of uncertain etymology, perhaps connected with a Celtic element meaning ‘horn’, ‘headland’), + Old English wealas ‘strangers’, ‘foreigners’, the term used by the Anglo-Saxons for British-speaking people.English : variant of Cornwell.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Shropshire, so called from Old English plæga, plega ‘play’, ‘sport’ + denu ‘valley’. Compare Playford. The vowel of the first syllable is not easy to explain, but it occurs as early as 1286, a single generation after the unambiguous Plaueden, Pleweden of 1252.
Girl/Female
Indian
Goddess of Earth; A Beautiful Girl
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Support
Boy/Male
Sikh
True God of heaven
HUTTON
HUTTON
HUTTON
HUTTON
HUTTON
a.
Relating to what is now called the Plutonic theory of the earth, first advanced by Dr. James Hutton.