What is the name meaning of POLLA. Phrases containing POLLA
See name meanings and uses of POLLA!POLLA
POLLA
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian
Poppy
Boy/Male
British, English
Crown
Boy/Male
British, English, Teutonic
Short Haired
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for someone with close-cropped hair or a large head, Middle English bolling ‘pollard’, or for a heavy drinker, from Middle English bolling ‘excessive drinking’.German (Bölling) : from a pet form of a personal name formed with Germanic bald ‘bold’, ‘brave’ (see Baldwin).Swedish : either an ornamental name composed of Boll + the suffix -ing ‘belonging to’, or possibly a habitational name from a place named Bolling(e).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for a person with a large or unusually shaped head, from Middle English poll ‘head’ (Middle Low German polle ‘(top of the) head’) + the pejorative suffix -ard. The term pollard in the sense denoting an animal that has had its horns lopped is not recorded before the 16th century, and as applied to a tree the word is not recorded until the 17th century; so both these senses are almost certainly too late to have contributed to the surname.English : pejorative derivative of the personal name Paul. The surname has been established in Ireland since the 14th century.
POLLA
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POLLA
n.
A lake whitefish (Coregonus pollan), native of Ireland. In appearance it resembles a herring.
n.
A fish, the chub.
v. t.
To lop the tops of, as trees; to poll; as, to pollard willows.
n.
A head or poll tax; hence, extortion.
n.
A stag that has cast its antlers.
n.
A mode of fishing with a hand line for pollack, mackerel, and the like.
n.
A hornless animal (cow or sheep).
n.
A tree having its top cut off at some height above the ground, that may throw out branches.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Pollard
n.
The pollack.
n.
A marine gadoid fish (Pollachius carbonarius), native both of the European and American coasts. It is allied to the cod, and like it is salted and dried. In England it is called coalfish, lob, podley, podling, pollack, etc.
n.
The European chub. See Pollard, 3 (a).
n.
The whole of the bran of wheat before it is sorted into pollard, bran, etc.
n.
The American pollock; the coalfish.
n.
A marine gadoid food fish of Europe (Pollachius virens). Called also greenfish, greenling, lait, leet, lob, lythe, and whiting pollack.
n.
A clipped coin; also, a counterfeit.
n.
The European pollack; -- called also laith, and leet.
n.
A poleax.
v. t.
A tree from which the branches have been cut; a pollard.
imp. & p. p.
of Pollard