Search references for CHTELET SURFACE. Phrases containing CHTELET SURFACE
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CHTELET SURFACE
Surname or Lastname
Dutch and German
Dutch and German : from a Germanic personal name, Halidher, composed of the elements halið ‘hero’ + hari, heri ‘army’, or from another personal name, Hildher, composed of the elements hild ‘strife’, ‘battle’ + the same second element.Dutch and North German : topographic name for someone living on a slope, from Middle Dutch helldinge ‘slanting surface’. Compare Halder.English : from an agent derivative of Old English healdan ‘to hold’, hence a name denoting an occupier or tenant. Compare Holder.English : variant of Hilder.English : possibly a variant of Elder, with the addition of an inorganic initial H-.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
A Chaplet of Flowers Worn in Hair
Male
Portuguese
Variant spelling of Portuguese Hélder, ÉLDER means "slanting surface."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English chitte ‘pup’, ‘cub’, ‘young (of an animal)’ (apparently related to Old English cī{dh} ‘shoot’, ‘sprout’).English : habitational name from a place named Chitty in the parish of Chislet, Kent, named from an Old English personal name Citta + ēg ‘island’, ‘dry ground in marsh’.Possibly an Americanized form of German Schütte (see Schutte).
Girl/Female
American, Assamese, British, Celebrity, English, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Sindhi, Telugu
A Small; Natural Hollow on the Surface of the Body; Happy; Dimples
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Greenery; The Lush Greenery on the Surface of the Earth
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Tamil
Prominence; Chaplet; Crest
Boy/Male
Hindu
Means greenery. the lush greenery on the surface of the earth
Boy/Male
Tamil
Means greenery. the lush greenery on the surface of the earth
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a stone- or bricklayer, from Middle English setter ‘one who lays stones or bricks in building’ (agent derivative of setten ‘to set’).English : occupational name from Old French saietier ‘silk weaver’ (an agent derivative of sayete, a kind of silk).English : from an agent derivative of Middle English setten ‘to place (decoration, on a garment or metal surface)’, probably an occupational name for an embroiderer.German : unexplained.Norwegian : unexplained.
Male
Portuguese
Portuguese name derived from the name of a Dutch town, from Middle Dutch helldinge, HÉLDER means "slanting surface."
Girl/Female
Biblical
House of expulsion.
Boy/Male
Hebrew
Power.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Wreath, Rope, Girdle, Chaplet
Surname or Lastname
Swiss German
Swiss German : probably an altered form of Swiss Büchi. However, in The Mennonite Encyclopedia Bitsche (or Bitschi) is proposed as the origin. See also Beachy.English : variant of Peach.Swiss Surnames shows numerous Büchis (mainly in Zürich and Toggenburg) and several variants (Bücheli, Büchele, Bücheler, Büchler, etc.), whereas Bitsch(e) is listed four times and was apparently taken to Switzerland from Germany at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. Peachey is most common in Mifflin Co., PA; other variants appear in various communities.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Surface of the Earth
Boy/Male
Tamil
Wreath, Rope, Girdle, Chaplet
Surname or Lastname
Jewish (Ashkenazic)
Jewish (Ashkenazic) : occupational name from Yiddish tesler ‘carpenter’. Compare Tesler.German : variant of Teschner.English : from an agent derivative of Old English tǣsel ‘teasel’, hence an occupational name for someone whose job was to brush the surface of newly-woven cloth or to card wood preparatory to spinning, using the dry seed-heads of teasels (a kind of thistle).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a sheepshearer or someone who used shears to trim the surface of finished cloth and remove excess nap, from Middle English shereman ‘shearer’.Americanized spelling of German Schuermann.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : occupational name for a tailor, from Yiddish sher ‘scissors’ + man ‘man’.Roger Sherman (1722–93), the only man to sign all three documents at the foundation of the American republic (the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the U.S. Constitution), was born in Newton, MA, a descendant of Capt. John Sherman, who had emigrated in about 1636 to MA from Dedham, Essex, England, where his father was a farmer, following his brother Edmund, who had emigrated two years earlier. A descendant of Edmund Sherman was the U.S. general William Tecumseh Sherman (1820–91), who led the Union march through GA. He was born in Lancaster, OH, the son of a judge; his middle name was bestowed in honor of a Shawnee chieftain.
Female
English
 English name derived from the flower name which originally meant "a line of verse engraved on the inner surface of a ring," but later acquired the POSY means "bouquet, flower." Pet form of English Josephine, meaning "(God) shall add (another son)."Â
CHTELET SURFACE
CHTELET SURFACE
Girl/Female
Indian
Boy/Male
Spanish American
God strengthens.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Without spite or envy, Learned woman
Female
Norse
Old Norse name composed of the elements valr "the dead, the slain" and dÃs "goddess, woman,"Â hence "goddess of the slain in battle."
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Heaven
Girl/Female
Tamil
Simple, Straight forward
Boy/Male
Tamil
Lingeshvaran | லீநà¯à®•ேஷà¯à®µà®°à®£Â
Girl/Female
Tamil
True
Boy/Male
Tamil
Smart and beautiful
Boy/Male
Indian
Gentle
CHTELET SURFACE
CHTELET SURFACE
CHTELET SURFACE
CHTELET SURFACE
CHTELET SURFACE
n.
A garland; a chaplet, esp. one given to a victor.
n.
A small chapel or shrine.
n.
A kind of chain pump, or dredging machine.
n.
A little castle.
n.
A little or short note; a billet.
n.
See Camelet.
n.
A tuft of feathers on a peacock's head.
imp. & p. p.
of Chaplet
n.
A summer cottage or country house in the Swiss mountains; any country house built in the style of the Swiss cottages.
n.
A garland or wreath to be worn on the head.
n.
A herdsman's hut in the mountains of Switzerland.
n.
A small molding, carved into beads, pearls, olives, etc.
n.
A pair of straps, with stirrups, joined at the top and fastened to the pommel or the frame of the saddle, after they have been adjusted to the convenience of the rider.
n.
A piece of meat, especially of veal or mutton, cut for broiling.
v. t.
To adorn with a chaplet or with flowers.
n.
See Camlet.
n.
A string of beads, or part of a string, used by Roman Catholic in praying; a third of a rosary, or fifty beads.
n.
A bent piece of sheet iron, or a pin with thin plates on its ends, for holding a core in place in the mold.
n.
A garland or fillet; a chaplet or wreath.
n.
A chapelet. See Chapelet, 1.