What is the name meaning of ANGLE. Phrases containing ANGLE
See name meanings and uses of ANGLE!ANGLE
Surname or Lastname
English and Irish (of Norman origin)
English and Irish (of Norman origin) : topographic name from Middle English and Old French angle ‘angle’, ‘corner’ (Latin angulus). As an Irish surname, it can also be habitational, from a place in Pembrokeshire, South Wales, named with this word.Americanized spelling of German Angel or Engel.
ANGLE
ANGLE
Girl/Female
Hindu
Angle, Of noble kind
Boy/Male
British, English
From Anglesey
Girl/Female
Indian
Pari fairy
Boy/Male
Danish, German, Swedish
Angle Bright
Girl/Female
Biblical, Christian, Danish, German, Hawaiian, Hebrew
Superficies; The Angle; Cassia; Name for a Variety of Trees and Shrubs; One of which Produces Cinnamon; Sweet Scented Spice; Super; Cinnamon Tree
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived near a place used for archery practice, from Middle English butte ‘mark for archery’, ‘target’, ‘goal’. In the Middle Ages archery practice was a feudal obligation, and every settlement had its practice area.English : topographic name from Middle English butte ‘strip of land abutting on a boundary’, ‘short strip or ridge at right angles to other strips in a common field’.English : from Middle English butte, bott ‘butt’, ‘cask’, applied as a metonymic occupational name for a cooper or as a nickname possibly for a heavy drinker or for a large, fat man.English : from a Middle English personal name, But(t), of unknown origin, perhaps originally a nickname meaning ‘short and stumpy’, and akin to late Middle English butt ‘thick end’, ‘stump’, ‘buttock’ (of Germanic origin).German and English : in both Middle Low German and Middle English the word but(te) denoted various types of marine fish, originally a fish with a blunt head, for example halibut (German Heilbutt) or turbot (German Steinbutt), and the surname may in some cases be a metonymic occupational name for a seller of fish or salt fish.Kashmiri : variant of Bhatt.Robert Butt came from Kent, England, to NC in 1640.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Middle English personal name Ingelot, a pet form of any of various names such as Ingelbald ‘Angle bold’, Ingelbert ‘Angle bright’, or Ingelard ‘Angle hardy’. These were names of Germanic origin, introduced to Britain by the Normans or possibly by the Danish invaders a century earlier.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Angle, Of noble kind
Boy/Male
German, Swedish
Angel; Bright Angle
Girl/Female
Tamil
Pari fairy
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Staffordshire named Engleton, from Old English Engla (genitive plural of Engle ‘Angle’) + tūn ‘settlement’.
Surname or Lastname
English and Irish (of Norman origin)
English and Irish (of Norman origin) : topographic name from Middle English and Old French angle ‘angle’, ‘corner’ (Latin angulus). As an Irish surname, it can also be habitational, from a place in Pembrokeshire, South Wales, named with this word.Americanized spelling of German Angel or Engel.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Old English Englisc. The word had originally distinguished Angles (see Engel) from Saxons and other Germanic peoples in the British Isles, but by the time surnames were being acquired it no longer had this meaning. Its frequency as an English surname is somewhat surprising. It may have been commonly used in the early Middle Ages as a distinguishing epithet for an Anglo-Saxon in areas where the culture was not predominantly English--for example the Danelaw area, Scotland, and parts of Wales--or as a distinguishing name after 1066 for a non-Norman in the regions of most intensive Norman settlement. However, explicit evidence for these assumptions is lacking, and at the present day the surname is fairly evenly distributed throughout the country.Irish : see Golightly.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Devon called Huxford (preserved in the name of Huxford Farm), from the Old English personal name HÅcc or the Old English word hÅc ‘hook or angle of land’ + ford ‘ford’.
Surname or Lastname
Scottish
Scottish : variant of Whan.English : topographic name for someone who lived in a corner or angle or land, from Old English hwamm ‘corner’, or a habitational name from Wham in County Durham, named with this word.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : Americanized form of French Anglais ‘English(man)’.
Girl/Female
Biblical Hebrew
Superficies, the angle, cassia.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a hornblower or worker in horn, from an agent derivative of Old French corne ‘horn’ (see Corne).English : metonymic occupational name for a maker of hand mills, from an agent derivative of Old English cweorn ‘hand mill’ (see Corn 3).English : topographic name for someone who lived on the corner of two streets or tracks, (Middle English corner, from Old French cornier ‘angle’, ‘corner’).Americanized spelling of German Körner (see Koerner) or Swiss Korner.
Girl/Female
German, Swedish
Bright Angle
Boy/Male
Hindu
Feminine
ANGLE
ANGLE
Male
Italian
Italian form of Latin Martinus, MARTINO means "of/like Mars."
Girl/Female
British, English, Greek
Good
Boy/Male
Australian, Greek, Swedish
Champion
Girl/Female
Arabic, Assamese, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Muslim, Sanskrit, Sindhi, Telugu
Ball; Anything Round; A Pearl
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sindhi
Cheerful
Boy/Male
Indian
Sing of Love Shining in Sky
Girl/Female
Indian, Sanskrit
Golden Stone
Girl/Female
Indian, Modern
Monkey
Girl/Female
Indian
Paradise
Boy/Male
Tamil
Sprout, Sapling, Offshoot, Newborn
ANGLE
ANGLE
ANGLE
ANGLE
ANGLE
a.
Having an angle or angles; -- used in compounds; as, right-angled, many-angled, etc.
a.
Having oblique angles; as, an oblique-angled triangle.
n.
A earthworm of the genus Lumbricus, frequently used by anglers for bait. See Earthworm.
v. i.
To use some bait or artifice; to intrigue; to scheme; as, to angle for praise.
n. pl.
An ancient Low German tribe, that settled in Britain, which came to be called Engla-land (Angleland or England). The Angles probably came from the district of Angeln (now within the limits of Schleswig), and the country now Lower Hanover, etc.
imp. & p. p.
of Angle
n.
One who angles.
n.
The place of meeting of two slopes of a roof, which have their plates running in different directions, and form on the plan a reentrant angle.
v. i.
To fish with an angle (fishhook), or with hook and line.
n.
An arrow or bolt for a crossbow having feathers or brass placed at an angle with the shaft to make it spin in flying.
n.
The place of a turn; an angle or corner, as of a road.
n.
A figure having eleven angles and eleven sides.
n. .
A level passage driven across the measures, or at right angles to veins which it is desired to reach; -- distinguished from the drift, or gangway, which is led along the vein when reached by the tunnel.
n.
A common, large, handsome, American swallowtail butterfly, now regarded as one of the forms of Papilio, / Jasoniades, glaucus. The wings are yellow, margined and barred with black, and with an orange-red spot near the posterior angle of the hind wings. Called also tiger swallowtail. See Illust. under Swallowtail.
n.
An instrument to measure angles, esp. one used by geologists to measure the dip of strata.
a.
Having acute angles; as, an acute-angled triangle, a triangle with every one of its angles less than a right angle.
n.
The difference of direction of two lines. In the lines meet, the point of meeting is the vertex of the angle.
n.
A little tower, frequently a merely ornamental structure at one of the angles of a larger structure.
a.
Containing a right angle or right angles; as, a right-angled triangle.
n.
A frame consisting of two bars crossing each other at right angles and turning on a post or pin, to hinder the passage of beasts, but admitting a person to pass between the arms; a turnstile. See Turnstile, 1.