Search references for MILLHEAD STREAM. Phrases containing MILLHEAD STREAM
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River in Essex, England
The Millhead Stream is a minor tributary of the River Lea in England. The stream flows north to south across the Waltham Abbey flood plain and through
Millhead_Stream
Town in Essex, England
Olympic Games. For over 300 years, the Royal Gunpowder Mills on the Millhead Stream were in operation, where many of the processes used in the explosives
Waltham_Abbey
Former industrial site in Waltham Abbey, England
man-made and date back to the seventeen century, or earlier: Cornmill Stream, Millhead Stream; and out, again though the River Lea and /or the Lee Flood Relief
Waltham Abbey Royal Gunpowder Mills
Waltham_Abbey_Royal_Gunpowder_Mills
Protected area in Hertfordshire, England
White Water Centre. Cornmill Stream, flows from the Lea at Fishers Green to rejoin the Lea at Waltham Abbey. Millhead Stream, flows through the former Royal
River_Lee_Country_Park
MILLHEAD STREAM
MILLHEAD STREAM
Surname or Lastname
Jewish (Ashkenazic)
Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant spelling of Levin.English, North German, and Dutch : from the Germanic personal name represented by Old English Lēofwine, Saxon Liafwin, composed of the elements lēof ‘dear’, ‘beloved’ + wine ‘friend’.English and Scottish : habitational name from places called Leven in East Yorkshire, Fife, and Renfrew. The first is probably from a stream name, possibly derived from a Celtic word meaning smooth (as in Welsh llyfyn). The Scottish place name is from a Gaelic river name meaning ‘elm river’.Dutch and North German : from a Flemish saint’s name, Lefwin (Lieven), the patron saint of Ghent (see Lewin 2).
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Gaelic
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English (mainly East Midlands)
English (mainly East Midlands) : habitational name from any of various places. Melbourne in former East Yorkshire is recorded in Domesday Book as Middelburne, from Old English middel ‘middle’ + burna ‘stream’; the first element was later replaced by the cognate Old Norse meðal. Melbourne in Derbyshire has as its first element Old English mylen ‘mill’, and Melbourn in Cambridgeshire probably Old English melde ‘milds’, a type of plant.
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English
English : variant spelling of Maidwell, a habitational name from a place in Northamptonshire named Maidwell, from Old English mægden ‘maidens’ + wella ‘spring’, ‘stream’.
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English
English : topographic name for someone who lived at a mill where wheat was milled, from Middle English whit ‘white’ (a reference to the color of wheatflour) + mille ‘mill’.
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English
English : habitational name from any of various minor places, for example in Cumbria, Northumberland, and Gloucestershire, all named from Old English lang ‘long’ + wella ‘spring’, ‘stream’.English : habitational name from Longueville-sur-Scie (formerly Longueville-la-Gifart) in Seine-Inférieure, France.
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English
English : topographic name for someone who lived beside a stream, Middle English streme.Americanized form of Swedish Ström or Danish Strøm (see Strom).
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English
English : variant spelling of Milham.
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English
English : from Middle English middel ‘middle’ + broke ‘brook’, ‘stream’, hence denoting someone who lived by a stream so called.
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Dutch (van Lingen) and German
Dutch (van Lingen) and German : habitational name from Lingen on the Ems river in Lower Saxony, Westphalia, and the former East Prussia.English (Herefordshire) : habitational name from a place in Herefordshire, so named from an old British stream name, Welsh llyn ‘water’ + possibly cain ‘clear’, ‘beautiful’.
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English
English : habitational name from a place in Cheshire, named in Old English as ‘boundary ((ge)mǣre) stream (pyll)’.
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English
English : habitational name from a lost place in Essex (probably near Pebmarsh) recorded in Domesday Book as Liffildeuuella ‘spring or stream (Old English wella) of a woman named Lēofhild’.
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English
English : topographic name for someone who lived beside a stream, from Old English læcc, læce (see Leach) + the suffix -er denoting an inhabitant.English : unflattering nickname for a lecher, Middle English lech(o)ur (Old French leceor). Reaney comments: ‘The surname is rare, probably usually disguised as Leger’.German (Letscher) : habitational name for someone from Letsch, near Bensberg, Rhineland, or various other places such as Letsche, Letschin, Letschow, etc. See also Letsch.
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English
English : possibly a habitational name from Mill Ham, Devon, or Millham Farm in Cornwall and Hereford, or perhaps a variant of Mileham.
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English
English : probably a habitational name from ‘The Leen’ (earlier Leon, ‘at the streams’) in Hereford or the Leen river in Nottinghamshire. Both are derived from a Celtic root verb lei- ‘flow’ (for example as in Welsh lliant ‘stream’).English : variant spelling of Lean.
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English
English : habitational name from Milstead in Kent, perhaps so named from Middle English middel ‘middle’ + stede ‘place’.
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Irish
Irish : reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Fhloinn and Ó Fhloinn (see Flynn).Scottish : variant of Lyne 3.English : habitational name from any of several places so called in Norfolk, in particular King’s Lynn, an important center of the medieval wool trade. The place name is probably from an Old Welsh word cognate with Gaelic linn ‘pool’, ‘stream’.
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English (Northumbria and Cumbria)
English (Northumbria and Cumbria) : habitational name from a place in Cumbria, named in Old English as ‘millstream’, from mylen ‘mill’ + burna ‘stream’.
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English
English : habitational name from places in Northumbria and Wiltshire, named in Old English as ‘mill stream’ (see Milburn).
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English
English : nickname for a noisy person, from Middle English lude ‘loud’ (Old English hlūd), perhaps in part preserving the Old English byname Hlūda that Ekwall postulates to explain the place names Loudham (Suffolk) and Lowdham (Nottinghamshire).English : topographic name for someone who lived by a roaring stream, Old English hlūde or hl̄de literally ‘the loud one’, or a habitational name from any of the places named from hl̄de, for example Lyde in Herefordshire and Somerset.English : variant of Louth.
MILLHEAD STREAM
MILLHEAD STREAM
Girl/Female
Hindu
A fairy-tale princess
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Arabic, Muslim
Mercury; Silver
Boy/Male
Tamil
Nivash | நிவாஸ, நிவாஸÂ
Home
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French, German, Portuguese
Power
Boy/Male
Tamil
Kobinath | கோபீநாத
Girl/Female
Tamil
Harsita | ஹரà¯à®¸à¯€à®¤à®¾
Happy, Full of Joy
Girl/Female
Welsh
God is gracious. God's gift.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
The Enemy of Serpents
Male
Yiddish
(מַ×ש×ֶעל) Yiddish form of Hebrew Asher, MASHEL means "happy."
Female
Persian/Iranian
Avestan name AMERETAT means "immortality." In Zoroastrian mythology, this is the name of a goddess of immortality.
MILLHEAD STREAM
MILLHEAD STREAM
MILLHEAD STREAM
MILLHEAD STREAM
MILLHEAD STREAM
n.
Tendency to mislead or deceive.
n.
See Bullhead, 1 (b).
n.
A source, spring, or fountain.
n.
The black-bellied plover (Squatarola helvetica); -- called also beetlehead.
n.
A fresh-water fish of many species, of the genus Uranidea, esp. U. gobio of Europe, and U. Richardsoni of the United States; -- called also miller's thumb.
n.
A stupid fellow; a lubber.
n.
In America, several species of Amiurus; -- called also catfish, horned pout, and bullpout.
a.
Twice milled or fulled, to render more compact or fine; -- said of cloth; as, double-milled kerseymere.
n.
A blockhead; a dolt.
n.
The golden plover.
n.
A small fish of the Mediterranean; a gilthead. See Gilthead (a).
n.
The Crenilabrus melops, of the British coasts; -- called also golden maid, conner, sea partridge.
n.
A small black water insect.
n.
See Gilthead.
v. t.
To misdirect; to mislead.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Mislead
imp. & p. p.
of Mislead
n.
A printed form, used by merchants in making out bills or rendering accounts.
n.
A marine fish of the genus Cottus; the sculpin.