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PORTE

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PORTE

  • Porter
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Scottish

    Porter

    English and Scottish : occupational name for the gatekeeper of a walled town or city, or the doorkeeper of a great house, castle, or monastery, from Middle English porter ‘doorkeeper’, ‘gatekeeper’ (Old French portier). The office often came with accommodation, lands, and other privileges for the bearer, and in some cases was hereditary, especially in the case of a royal castle. As an American surname, this has absorbed cognates and equivalents in other European languages, for example German Pförtner (see Fortner) and North German Poertner.English : occupational name for a man who carried loads for a living, especially one who used his own muscle power rather than a beast of burden or a wheeled vehicle. This sense is from Old French porteo(u)r (Late Latin portator, from portare ‘to carry or convey’).Dutch : occupational name from Middle Dutch portere ‘doorkeeper’. Compare 1.Dutch : status name for a freeman (burgher) of a seaport, Middle Dutch portere, modern Dutch poorter.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : adoption of the English or Dutch name in place of some Ashkenazic name of similar sound or meaning.

  • Reep
  • Surname or Lastname

    Dutch

    Reep

    Dutch : occupational name for a ropemaker (see Roper).English : possibly a metonymic occupational name for a porter or a basket maker, from Middle English (h)rip ‘basket’. Compare Ripper.

  • Portman
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (West Midlands)

    Portman

    English (West Midlands) : elaborated form of Port.Dutch : from poort ‘gate’ + man ‘man’, an occupational name for a gatekeeper or a topographic name for someone who lived near the gates of a walled town (typically the man in charge of them). Compare Porter.American spelling of German Portmann.

  • Porter
  • Boy/Male

    French Latin American

    Porter

    Gatekeeper.

  • MERLIN
  • Male

    English

    MERLIN

    English form of Latin Merlinus, the name of a famous wizard of Arthurian legend, MERLIN means "sea-fort." Merlin was introduced into Arthurian legend by Geoffrey of Monmouth. According to Geoffrey, Merlin was the son of a demon and a princess. He became known for his prophetic abilities at a very young age and was consulted by King Vortigern to explain why his castle kept collapsing. Merlin revealed that there was an underground lake in which two dragons slept, a white one and a red one, representing the Saxons and Britons, and this was the portent for things to come. He is also called Myrddin Emrys, meaning "Merlin the Immortal." 

  • Port
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Port

    English : from Middle English port ‘gateway’, ‘entrance’ (Old French porte, from Latin porta), hence a topographic name for someone who lived near the gates of a fortified town or city, typically, the man in charge of them. Compare Porter 1.English : topographic name for someone who lived near a harbor or in a market town, from the homonymous Middle English port (Old English port ‘harbor’, ‘market town’, from Latin portus ‘harbor’, ‘haven’, reinforced in Middle English by Old French port, from the same source).German : topographic name for someone who lived near a (city) gate, from Middle Low German porte (modern German Pforte) (see sense 1).Jewish (from Lithuania and Belarus) : unexplained.

  • St. George
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (of Norman origin)

    St. George

    English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from any of the numerous places in France so called from the dedication of their churches to St. George (see George).French : secondary surname to the primary surnames De la Porte, Godfroy, Lapointe, and Laporte.

  • Bayliss
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bayliss

    English : occupational name for an officer of a court of justice, whose duties included serving writs, distraining goods, and (formerly) arresting people. In England formerly it was also a status name for the chief officer of a hundred (administrative subdivision of a county). The derivation is from Middle English, Old French bailis, from Late Latin baiulivus (adjective), ‘pertaining to an attendant or porter’ (see Bailey).Thomas Baylies, a prominent Quaker, came to Boston from London in 1737.

  • Bailey
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bailey

    English : status name for a steward or official, Middle English bail(l)i (Old French baillis, from Late Latin baiulivus, an adjectival derivative of baiulus ‘attendant’, ‘carrier’ ‘porter’).English : topographic name for someone who lived by the outer wall of a castle, Middle English bail(l)y, baile ‘outer courtyard of a castle’, from Old French bail(le) ‘enclosure’, a derivative of bailer ‘to enclose’, a word of unknown origin. This term became a place name in its own right, denoting a district beside a fortification or wall, as in the case of the Old Bailey in London, which formed part of the early medieval outer wall of the city.English : habitational name from Bailey in Lancashire, named with Old English beg ‘berry’ + lēah ‘woodland clearing’.English : Anglicized form of French Bailly.English : The surname Bailey was established early on in North America by several different bearers; one of them, James Bailey, was one of the founders of Rowley, MA.

  • Last
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (East Anglia)

    Last

    English (East Anglia) : metonymic occupational name for a cobbler, or perhaps a metonymic occupational name for a maker of cobblers’ lasts (see Laster).German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : metonymic occupational name for a porter, from Middle High German last; German Last or Yiddish last ‘burden’, ‘load’.Dutch : metonymic occupational name as in 2, from Middle Dutch last ‘load’, ‘burden’; or a nickname for an awkward character, from Dutch last ‘trouble’, ‘nuisance’.French : habitational name from a place so named in Puy-de-Dôme.

  • Berman
  • Surname or Lastname

    Jewish (Ashkenazic)

    Berman

    Jewish (Ashkenazic) : from the Yiddish male personal name Berman, meaning ‘bear man’.Respelling of German Bermann 1–3.English : occupational name for a porter, Middle English berman (Old English bærmann, from beran ‘to carry’ + mann ‘man’).English : possibly from a Middle English personal name, Ber(e)man, which may be derived from Old English Beornmund, composed of the elements beorn ‘young man’, ‘warrior’ + mund ‘protection’.

  • Porten
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Porten

    English : possibly a variant of Porton, a habitational name from Porton in Wiltshire or Poorton in Dorset; both place names are formed with an obscure first element, perhaps the name of a river, + Old English tūn ‘settlement’.Dutch : habitational name for someone from a place named with Dutch poort ‘gate’.

  • Porte
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Porte

    English : variant spelling of Port.French : from Old French porte ‘gateway’, ‘entrance’ (from Latin porta), hence a topographic name for someone who lived near the gates of a fortified town (typically, the man in charge of them).Jewish (Sephardic) : variant of Porta.

  • Pollyanna
  • Girl/Female

    English

    Pollyanna

    Compound of the names Polly and Anna. Writer Eleanor Porter invented this name for the heroine...

  • Porteur
  • Boy/Male

    French

    Porteur

    Gatekeeper.

  • Shark
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Shark

    English : possibly a variant of Chark, a metonymic occupational name for a porter or carrier, from Old French charche ‘load’.

  • Haler
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Haler

    English : possibly an occupational name for a porter or carrier, from an agent derivative of Middle English hailen ‘to haul’, ‘to drag’, from Old French haler ‘to pull’.Slovenian : variant spelling of German Haller.

  • PORTER
  • Male

    English

    PORTER

    English occupational surname transferred to forename use, PORTER means "doorkeeper."

  • Nyree
  • Girl/Female

    Maori

    Nyree

    Maori name made popular by New Zealand actress Nyree Dawn Porter.

  • Porteus
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Porteus

    English : variant spelling of Porteous.

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PORTE

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PORTE

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PORTE

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PORTE

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PORTE

  • Porterhouse
  • n.

    A house where porter is sold.

  • Portent
  • n.

    That which portends, or foretoken; esp., that which portends evil; a sign of coming calamity; an omen; a sign.

  • Porter
  • n.

    A bar of iron or steel at the end of which a forging is made; esp., a long, large bar, to the end of which a heavy forging is attached, and by means of which the forging is lifted and handled in hammering and heating; -- called also porter bar.

  • Portentous
  • a.

    Hence: Monstrous; prodigious; wonderful; dreadful; as, a beast of portentous size.

  • Ominous
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to an omen or to omens; being or exhibiting an omen; significant; portentous; -- formerly used both in a favorable and unfavorable sense; now chiefly in the latter; foreboding or foreshowing evil; inauspicious; as, an ominous dread.

  • Stout
  • n.

    A strong malt liquor; strong porter.

  • Portending
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Portend

  • Omen
  • v. t.

    To divine or to foreshow by signs or portents; to have omens or premonitions regarding; to predict; to augur; as, to omen ill of an enterprise.

  • Prodigy
  • n.

    Something extraordinary, or out of the usual course of nature, from which omens are drawn; a portent; as, eclipses and meteors were anciently deemed prodigies.

  • Omen
  • n.

    An occurrence supposed to portend, or show the character of, some future event; any indication or action regarded as a foreshowing; a foreboding; a presage; an augury.

  • Portentous
  • a.

    Of the nature of a portent; containing portents; foreshadowing, esp. foreshadowing ill; ominous.

  • Soothsay
  • n.

    Omen; portent. Having

  • Purse
  • n.

    A small bag or pouch, the opening of which is made to draw together closely, used to carry money in; by extension, any receptacle for money carried on the person; a wallet; a pocketbook; a portemonnaie.

  • Porterage
  • n.

    Money charged or paid for the carriage of burdens or parcels by a porter.

  • Prodigious
  • a.

    Of the nature of a prodigy; marvelous; wonderful; portentous.

  • Portesse
  • n.

    See Porteass.

  • Portended
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Portend

  • Porterage
  • n.

    The work of a porter; the occupation of a carrier or of a doorkeeper.

  • Porte-cochere
  • n.

    A large doorway allowing vehicles to drive into or through a building. It is common to have the entrance door open upon the passage of the porte-cochere. Also, a porch over a driveway before an entrance door.

  • Porte
  • n.

    The Ottoman court; the government of the Turkish empire, officially called the Sublime Porte, from the gate (port) of the sultan's palace at which justice was administered.