What is the name meaning of MEW. Phrases containing MEW
See name meanings and uses of MEW!MEW
MEW
Male
Scottish
Scottish Gaelic form of the Old Norse byname Skári, SGÀIRE means "sea-mew," another name for the common seagull.
Male
English
 Anglicized form of Scottish Gaelic Sgà ire, ZACHERY means "sea-mew," another name for the common seagull. Variant spelling of English Zachary, meaning "whom Jehovah remembered."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from an Old English nickname mǣw, mēaw ‘seagull’, or the same word used as a personal name, Mēawa. Compare Maw.English : metonymic occupational name for someone in charge of a mew, a cage for hawks and falcons, especially while moulting, from Old French mue, a derivative of muer ‘to moult’ (from Latin mutare ‘to change’).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Penton Mewsey, Hampshire, which is named with Old English pening ‘penny’ + tūn ‘farmstead’, ‘settlement’, i.e. a farmstead paying a penny rent.
Male
Norse
Old Norse byname SKÃRI means "sea-mew," another name for the common seagull.
Surname or Lastname
North German
North German : from a short form of the personal name Bartholomäus (see Bartholomew).English : habitational name from Meaux (pronounced ‘Myoos’) in Humberside, formerly in East Yorkshire. This was named in Old Norse as ‘sandbank pool’, from melr ‘sandbank’, ‘sandhill’ + sær ‘sea’, ‘lake’, and subsequently assimilated by folk etymology to a French place name.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained. Perhaps a variant of Newborn. This name occurs frequently in NC.
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Fruit of Hard Work
Surname or Lastname
English
English : name for someone who was related to an important local personality, from Middle English maugh, maw ‘relative’, especially by marriage (from Old English mÄge ‘female relative’). In the north of England this term was used more specifically to mean ‘brother-in-law’.English : topographic name from Middle English mawe ‘meadow’. Some early forms, such as Sibilla de la Mawe (Suffolk 1275), clearly indicate a topographic origin, by reason of the preposition and article.English : probably also from a Middle English personal name, Mawe, Old English MÄ“awa, perhaps originally a byname from Old English mÇ£w ‘sea mew’, ‘seagull’ (compare Mew).
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MEW
n.
A stable or range of stables for horses; -- compound used in the plural, and so called from the royal stables in London, built on the site of the king's mews for hawks.
n.
One that mewls.
v. i.
See Mewl, and Miaul.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Mewl
v. t.
To shed or cast; to change; to molt; as, the hawk mewed his feathers.
imp. & p. p.
of Mewl
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Mew
n.
A gull, esp. the common British species (Larus canus); called also sea mew, maa, mar, mow, and cobb.
v. i. & n.
See 6th and 7th Mew.
n.
The sea mew.
v. i.
See Mew, to cry as a cat.
imp. & p. p.
of Mew
n.
An umbelliferous herb (Meum Athamanticum) having finely divided leaves, common in Europe; -- called also baldmoney, mew, and bearwort.
n.
A gull; the mew.
n.
A cage for hawks while mewing; a coop for fattening fowls; hence, any inclosure; a place of confinement or shelter; -- in the latter sense usually in the plural.
v. i.
To mew; to molt.
n.
The sea mew.
n.
Same as Mew, a gull.