What is the name meaning of TAYLOR. Phrases containing TAYLOR
See name meanings and uses of TAYLOR!TAYLOR
TAYLOR
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, Australian, British, Chinese, English, French, Jamaican
To Cut; Tailor; One who Cuts Cloth; Cutter of Cloth
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Chinese, English, German
To Cut; Tailor; Cutter of Cloth
Girl/Female
British, English
Form of Taylor
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Taylor.Indian (Gujarat and Bombay city) : Hindu and Parsi occupational name from the English word tailor.
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English
Tailor; A Blend of Taylor and Dylan; Surname
Girl/Female
British, English
Form of Taylor
Girl/Female
American, British, English
A Form of Taylor; Tailor
Male
English
Variant spelling of English unisex Taylor, TAYLER means "cutter of cloth, tailor."
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, Christian, English, French, German, Latin, Teutonic
Prayer; From the Saint-maur; Marshy Land Near the Sea; Taylor
Male
English
English occupational surname transferred to unisex forename use, TAYLOR means "cutter of cloth, tailor."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Taylor.
Girl/Female
English American
Tailor.
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English, German, Jamaican
Tailor; A Blend of Taylor and Dylan; Surname; Tall
Boy/Male
English American French
Tailor. Surname.
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Chinese, English, Hindu, Indian, Italian, Japanese, Latin, Marathi
Form of Tea; Taylor; Valley Field; One who is Young
Surname or Lastname
German
German : patronymic from a personal name (Latin Gallus) which was widespread in Europe in the Middle Ages (see Gall 2).German : nickname for someone in the service of the monastery of St Gallen, or a habitational name for someone from the city in Switzerland so named.English : variant of Gallier.Hungarian (Gallér) : from gallér ‘collar’, hence a metonymic occupational name for a taylor, in particular a maker of military garments.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : from German Galle ‘bile’, ‘gall’, with the agent suffix -er. This surname seems to have been one of the group of names selected at random from vocabulary words by government officials.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : occupational name for a tailor, from Old French tailleur (Late Latin taliator, from taliare ‘to cut’). The surname is extremely common in Britain and Ireland, and its numbers have been swelled by its adoption as an Americanized form of the numerous equivalent European names, most of which are also very common among Ashkenazic Jews, for example Schneider, Szabo, and Portnoy.
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a.
Rotten; fetid; stinking; base; worthless. Jer. Taylor.
a.
Clothed. Taylor (1630).
n.
One who ascribes a human form or human attributes to the Deity or to a polytheistic deity. Taylor. Specifically, one of a sect of ancient heretics who believed that God has a human form, etc. Tillotson.
a.
Pertaining to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, or to his poetry or metaphysics.