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English politician
Thomas Chettle (died c. 1640) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1614. Chettle was of Worcester and was possibly admitted to
Thomas_Chettle
English politician, author and philosopher (1478–1535)
biographies in Modern English. Sir Thomas More is a play written circa 1592 in collaboration between Henry Chettle, Anthony Munday, William Shakespeare
Thomas_More
Elizabethan play likely worked on by Shakespeare
VIII. The play is considered to be written by Anthony Munday and Henry Chettle and revised by several writers. The manuscript is particularly notable
Sir_Thomas_More_(play)
1969 song by the Beatles
field. Type Golden Slumbers Beatles in the "Search:" field. Dekker, Thomas; Chettle, Henry; Haughton, William (1603). The Pleasant Comodie of Patient Grissill
Golden_Slumbers
16th-century English pamphleteer and playwright
Henry Chettle (c. 1564 – c. 1606) was an English dramatist and miscellaneous writer of the Elizabethan era, best known for his pamphleteering. The son
Henry_Chettle
Elizabethan drama by Thomas Dekker, Henry Chettle, and William Haughton
Patient Grissel, or Patient Grissil, is a comedy by Thomas Dekker, written in collaboration with Henry Chettle and William Haughton in 1600. It is a variation
Patient_Grissel
1623: John Haselock 1631: Thomas Chettle 1633: John Nash 1635: George Street 1646: Edward Elvines 1656: Edmund Pitt 1667: Thomas Street 1709: Richard Lane
List_of_mayors_of_Worcester
The Stepmother's Tragedy is a play written by Henry Chettle and Thomas Dekker. It is mentioned in Philip Henslowe's diary in August 1599. No extant copies
The_Stepmother's_Tragedy
Surname list
long-distance runner Henry Chettle (c.1564–c.1606), English dramatist Steve Chettle (born 1968), English footballer Thomas Chettle (died c.1640), English
Chettle_(surname)
Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1885 onwards
constituencies in West Midlands (region) Worcester woman The election of Thomas Geers Winford in 1747 was overturned on petition, and Robert Tracy was declared
Worcester (UK Parliament constituency)
Worcester_(UK_Parliament_constituency)
Berkeley (1582–1658) of Cotheridge and his wife Margaret, daughter of Thomas Chettle of Worcester. Rowland's father, William, was eldest son and heir to
Rowland_Berkeley_(died_1696)
English politician
died in 1711 and was buried at Chettle on 16 March 1711. Paula Watson. "CHAFIN (CHAFFIN), Thomas II (1675-1711), of Chettle, Dorset". History of Parliament
Thomas_Chafin_(1675–1711)
English dramatist and pamphleteer (c. 1572–1632)
(co-written with Henry Chettle and William Haughton) The Merry Devil of Edmonton (1604) The Honest Whore (1604) (co-written with Thomas Middleton) Westward
Thomas_Dekker_(writer)
English politician
Thomas Chafin (1650–1691), of Chettle, Dorset, was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1679 and 1691. Chafin commanded a troop
Thomas_Chafin_(1650–1691)
Grade I listed building in Dorset, England
Chettle House is a Grade I listed country manor house with Queen Anne style architecture in Chettle, North Dorset, England, about 6 miles (10 km) northeast
Chettle_House
Spetchley Dorothy, eldest daughter, who married in 1593 Thomas Wylde (1558–1610, grandson of Thomas Wylde) of The Commandery and was mother of Margaret,
Rowland_Berkeley_(died_1611)
Village in Dorset, England
Chettle is a small village and civil parish in the county of Dorset in southern England. It lies 6 miles (10 kilometres) northeast of Blandford Forum
Chettle
English judge and politician
the son of Rowland Berkeley and his wife Catherine Hayward, daughter of Thomas Hayward. He was admitted to Middle Temple in 1600 and was called to the
Robert_Berkeley_(judge)
English Baroque architect
1717–1720 Marlow Place, Buckinghamshire, 1720 Chettle House, Dorset, c. 1730 Monument to Susannah Thomas, Hampton Church, Middlesex, c. 1731 Archer Memorial
Thomas_Archer
Worcester 1604–1624 With: Christopher Deighton 1604 Rowland Berkeley 1605 Thomas Chettle 1614 Robert Berkeley 1621–1624 Succeeded by Walter Devereux Henry Spelman
John_Coucher
16th/17th-century English playwright
author of Sir Thomas More, on which he is believed to have collaborated with Henry Chettle, Thomas Heywood, William Shakespeare and Thomas Dekker. He was
Anthony_Munday
1607 history play by John Webster and Thomas Dekker
previous play called Lady Jane, thought to have been written by Henry Chettle, Thomas Heywood and Wentworth Smith. This earlier work has not survived. The
Sir_Thomas_Wyatt_(play)
British landowner and Tory politician
1754. Chafin was baptized on 7 January 1689, the fifth son of Thomas Chafin MP of Chettle and his wife Anne Penruddock, daughter of Colonel John Penruddock
George_Chafin
1592 tract by Robert Greene
printer Henry Chettle, who arranged its publication. Groatsworth was entered in the Stationers' Register 'upon the peril of Henry Chettle' on 20 September
Greene's_Groats-Worth_of_Wit
Group of late 16th century English playwrights
and who can claim as seconds to him not merely the imperfect talents of Chettle, Munday, and others whom we may mention in this chapter, but many of the
University_Wits
of England, from the Norman Conquest in 1066 to the year 1803 (London: Thomas Hansard, 1808) Willis, Browne (1750). Notitia Parliamentaria, Part II: A
List of MPs elected to the English parliament in 1614
List_of_MPs_elected_to_the_English_parliament_in_1614
16th/17th-century English theatrical entrepreneur and impresario
produced plays by, or made loans to Ben Jonson, Thomas Middleton, Henry Chettle, George Chapman, Thomas Dekker, John Webster, Anthony Munday, Henry Porter
Philip_Henslowe
Play
decade. The records of theatre manager Philip Henslowe show that Henry Chettle and John Day were working on a play about Jane Shore in May 1603 for Worcester's
Edward_IV_(play)
legend, that were written by Anthony Munday (possibly with help from Henry Chettle) in 1598 and published in 1601. They are among the relatively few surviving
The Downfall and The Death of Robert Earl of Huntington
The_Downfall_and_The_Death_of_Robert_Earl_of_Huntington
Australian politician (1830–1919)
Sydney Talbot Smith BA LLB (1861– 3 October 1948), married Florence Oliver Chettle (died 21 September 1935), in 1887, with whom he had four children. Sir
Edwin_Thomas_Smith
16th-century English playwright and actor
and 2, with Michael Drayton, Henry Chettle, and Thomas Dekker; March 1598. Piers of Exton, with Drayton, Chettle, and Dekker; March 1598. Black Bateman
Robert_Wilson_(dramatist)
British painter (1880–1952)
Thomas Cantrell Dugdale RA RP ROI (2 June 1880 – 13 November 1952) was a British artist. He was a member of the Royal Academy, was a renowned portrait
Thomas_Cantrell_Dugdale
Scholarly editions of the works of Shakespeare
written by Anthony Munday and Henry Chettle, the other revisers supposedly being Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood, and the unidentified "Hand C"
Arden_Shakespeare
Possible order of composition of Shakespeare's plays
Munday and Henry Chettle. Censored by Edmund Tilney. Revisions co-ordinated by Hand C. Revised by Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood and William
Chronology of Shakespeare's plays
Chronology_of_Shakespeare's_plays
Australian criminal and murderer (born 1973)
charged with and pled guilty to the offences. The sentencing judge Geoffrey Chettle called Johnson a "real menace to society" with no prospects of rehabilitation
Matthew_Charles_Johnson
English Jesuit priest
Elizabethan era. He was born into the English nobility as the second son of Sir Thomas Gerard at Old Bryn Hall, near Ashton-in-Makerfield, Lancashire. After attending
John_Gerard_(Jesuit)
Nursery rhyme
Boy Scouts of America. 1955. J. Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps and Henry Chettle, eds, Tarlton's Jests: And News Out of Purgatory (Oxford: Oxford University
The_Grand_Old_Duke_of_York
16th/17th-century English dramatist
of Philip Henslowe's playwrights, collaborating with Henry Chettle, William Haughton, Thomas Dekker, Richard Hathwaye and Wentworth Smith. There are 22
John_Day_(dramatist)
Association football match in London
game on 60 minutes with South African Eric Tinkler being replaced by Geoff Thomas. Ipswich narrowly missed extending their lead as Mowbray headed a Magilton
2000 Football League First Division play-off final
2000_Football_League_First_Division_play-off_final
Municipal building in Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire, England
"Roman Catholic Church of Sir Thomas More (1364518)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 1 December 2021. Chettle, H. F.; Powell, W. R.; Spalding
St Thomas More Roman Catholic Church, Bradford-on-Avon
St_Thomas_More_Roman_Catholic_Church,_Bradford-on-Avon
16th/17th-century English publisher
who gained the rights to Henry V two years earlier. Thomas Millington published Henry Chettle's England's Mourning Garment in 1603, but then disappears
Thomas_Millington_(publisher)
16th-century English playwright
During the years 1597 to 1602 he collaborated in many plays with Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, John Day, Richard Hathwaye and Wentworth Smith. Haughton's
William_Haughton_(playwright)
English Shakespeare scholar and editor
Malone Society and the advisory board of Internet Shakespeare Editions. Chettle, Henry. The Tragedy of Hoffman (1983) University of Liverpool. William
John_Jowett
1972 poetry anthology edited by Helen Gardner
Chapman - Thomas Chatterton - Geoffrey Chaucer - G. K. Chesterton - Henry Chettle - John Clare - John Cleveland - Arthur Hugh Clough - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The New Oxford Book of English Verse 1250–1950
The_New_Oxford_Book_of_English_Verse_1250–1950
University Press, 1985), pp. 183–189. J. Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps and Henry Chettle, eds, Tarlton's Jests: And News Out of Purgatory (Oxford: Oxford University
List_of_nursery_rhymes
Work by Ben Jonson
advance payment of five shillings to Henry Chettle, for a play titled Catiline's Conspiracy—though Chettle appears never to have completed writing it
Catiline_His_Conspiracy
16th/17th-century English playwright
Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood and John Webster, October 1602. Thought to be the same as (or an early version of) the extant Sir Thomas Wyatt
Wentworth_Smith
English smuggler
Gen Sir John Fryer; the banker Edward Castleman, owner of Chettle House; and Captain Thomas Hanham, instrumental in the campaign to legalise cremation
Isaac_Gulliver
Football club
Steve Sutton Tony Woodcock Chris Woods David Campbell Gary Charles Steve Chettle Paul Crichton Nigel Clough Mark Crossley Sean Dyche Chris Fairclough Scot
Nottingham Forest F.C. Under-21s and Academy
Nottingham_Forest_F.C._Under-21s_and_Academy
British composer
Francis Barrington Edmund Bonner Henry Chettle Richard Cox Robert Culliford Robert Daborne John Dickens Thomas Drury John Eliot John Gerard Hannah Glasse
John_Baptist_Grano
The next entry in the Diary refers to ‘The Orphan's Tragedy’ by Henry Chettle, which was apparently never finished. This may be the second half of Yarington's
Robert_Yarington
Great Officer of State in the United Kingdom
5 November 2019. Retrieved 23 May 2025. Munday, Anthony; Chettle, Henry (2002). Sir Thomas More. Manchester University Press. p. 120. ISBN 978-0-7190-1632-5
Lord_Chancellor
16th/17th-century English playwright
Greene, Shakespeare, Thomas Nash, Thomas Heywood, Anthony Mundye our best plotter, Chapman, Porter, Wilson, Hathway, and Henry Chettle." Brooke, C. F. Tucker
William_Gager
Village and civil parish in Dorset, England
21 December 1852 the Bishop of Salisbury dedicated the new church to St Thomas, whose feast day it was. Melbury Abbas village is on an unclassified road
Melbury_Abbas
Grade I listed English country house in Wiltshire in the United Kingdom
). Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. pp. 257–259. ISBN 978-0-14-0710-26-7. Chettle, H.G.; Powell, W.R.; Spalding, P.A.; Tillott, P.M. (1953). Pugh, R.B.;
Great_Chalfield_Manor
British Shakespeare scholar (1909–2000)
1623, in order to create a single text. He wrote two monographs on Henry Chettle and Edward Benlowes, and he published editions of Elizabethan plays and
Harold Jenkins (Shakespeare scholar)
Harold_Jenkins_(Shakespeare_scholar)
English poet, pamphleteer, satirist and writer
took place under Rev. John Greaves, the father of John, Sir Edward and Thomas Greaves. Between the ages of fifteen and seventeen, he studied at Magdalen
George_Wither
English actress and comedian (born 1970)
Ophelia) and Cluub Zarathustra with Simon Munnery, Stewart Lee, Richard Thomas, Julian Barratt and Lori Lixenburg. Her first television role was in Lee
Sally_Phillips
National museum in London, England
Celtic bronze mirrors with La Tène decoration including those from Aston, Chettle, Desborough, Holcombe and St Keverne in England, (100 BC – 100 AD) Cordoba
British_Museum
English playwright, poet, and actor (1572–1637)
(1598), with Porter and Henry Chettle; Page of Plymouth (1599), with Dekker; and Robert II, King of Scots (1599), with Chettle and Dekker. Several of Jonson's
Ben_Jonson
Character from European folklore
Grissill (also known as The Plaie of Grissill) dates from 1565. Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker and William Haughton collaborated on another dramatic version
Griselda_(folklore)
English landowner and lesbian diarist (1791–1840)
was sent to a school in Agnesgate, Ripon, run by a Mrs Hagues and a Mrs Chettle. Between 1801 and 1804, she was educated at home by the Reverend George
Anne_Lister
British sculptor and environmentalist
(1994). Stone. London: Viking. ISBN 0-670-85478-6. Goldsworthy, Andy; Chettle, Steve; Nesbitt, Paul; Humphries, Andrew (1996). Sheepfolds. London: Michael
Andy_Goldsworthy
Theatre of England between 1558 and 1642
Cheke Henry Chettle John Clavell Anthony Chute Robert Daborne Samuel Daniel William Davenant Robert Davenport John Davidson John Day Thomas Dekker Michael
English_Renaissance_theatre
Town in Wiltshire, England
"Bradford-on-Avon: population statistics". CityPopulation.de. Retrieved 20 April 2023. Chettle, H. F.; Powell, W. R.; Spalding, P. A.; Tillott, P. M. (1953). "Parishes:
Bradford-on-Avon
Monastery in Wiltshire, England
Record Society 34). H.F. Chettle, Lacock Abbey, in Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine 51 (1947) 6. H.F. Chettle, Lacock Abbey, in Wiltshire
Lacock_Abbey_(monastery)
Bishop of Ely
In 1543 he was employed to ferret out the "Prebendaries' Plot" against Thomas Cranmer, and became the Archbishop's chancellor. In December, he was appointed
Richard_Cox_(bishop)
English Catholic martyr
Francis Barrington Edmund Bonner Henry Chettle Richard Cox Robert Culliford Robert Daborne John Dickens Thomas Drury John Eliot John Gerard Hannah Glasse
Nicholas_Owen_(Jesuit)
Henry Chettle, Henry Porter and Ben Jonson; mentioned in Henslowe's diary, August 1598. The Stepmother's Tragedy, a play by Henry Chettle and Thomas Dekker;
List_of_lost_literary_works
English court
the Marshalsea and Palace Courts. London: S. Sweet. pp. 237–238. Allen, Thomas (1828). The History and Antiquities of London (Volume IV). London: Cowie
Marshalsea_Court
Seeking extent of Shakespeare's writings
Munday and Henry Chettle, then perhaps several years later heavily revised by another team of playwrights, including Thomas Heywood, Thomas Dekker, and possibly
Shakespeare attribution studies
Shakespeare_attribution_studies
English Renaissance stage play
uncertain. Individual scholars have also discussed the hypothesis that Henry Chettle may have had a hand in the play, and a few have allowed a possibility that
Lust's_Dominion
Barnsley 1999–2000 football season
1–3 32,692 Thomas 27 November 1999 Queens Park Rangers A 2–2 11,054 Thomas, Eaden 4 December 1999 Charlton Athletic H 1–1 14,553 Chettle 18 December
1999–2000 Barnsley F.C. season
1999–2000_Barnsley_F.C._season
Building in Greenwich, London
1–39. doi:10.1017/S0066622X00003853. JSTOR 41417501. S2CID 187410282. Chettle, George H. "Architectural Description". Survey of London Monograph 14,
Queen's_House
Spanish novelist, poet, and playwright; proposed by Carlos Fuentes in 1976. Chettle, Henry (1560–1607), playwright, polemicist, proposed as a member of a group
List of Shakespeare authorship candidates
List_of_Shakespeare_authorship_candidates
English author (1558–1592)
part of Groatsworth was written shortly after Greene's death by Henry Chettle or another one of his fellow writers, hoping to capitalise on a lurid tale
Robert_Greene_(dramatist)
Australian psychiatrist and viceroy (1930–2026)
Archived from the original on 27 February 2016. Retrieved 24 August 2015. Chettle, Nicole (12 November 2014). "Colour, courtyards and chill-out zones: inside
Marie_Bashir
house dramatist of the group; plays by Philip Massinger, John Ford, and Thomas Heywood were also important in their repertory. The company staged revivals
Queen_Henrietta's_Men
English football club season
1–0 15,033 Chettle 17 February 1998 Huddersfield Town H 3–0 18,231 van Hooijdonk (2), Bonalair 21 February 1998 Stoke City A 1–1 16,899 Thomas-Moore 24
1997–98 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
1997–98_Nottingham_Forest_F.C._season
Decade
Shakespeare (b. 1580) Chen Lin, general of Ming dynasty China and Korea Henry Chettle, English writer (b. 1564) 1608 January 4 – Peter Edgcumbe, English politician
1600s_(decade)
16th-century English poet and dramatist (1519–1562)
Francis Barrington Edmund Bonner Henry Chettle Richard Cox Robert Culliford Robert Daborne John Dickens Thomas Drury John Eliot John Gerard Hannah Glasse
Nicholas_Grimald
Play by William Shakespeare
his or Shakespeare's play was written first. In addition, Thomas Dekker and Henry Chettle wrote a play called Troilus and Cressida at around the same
Troilus_and_Cressida
of Tyrone. Spenser leaves for London shortly after. November 25 – Henry Chettle is paid for "mending" a play about Robin Hood to make it suitable for performance
1598_in_literature
English football club season
RB: #17, Thierry Bonalair, 27 CB: #15, Craig Armstrong, 24 CB: #5, Steve Chettle, 36 LB: #3, Alan Rogers, 38 RM: #7, Steve Stone, 30 CM: #11, Chris Bart-Williams
1998–99 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
1998–99_Nottingham_Forest_F.C._season
also used the architectural design of a broken pediment on the façade in Chettle House, Dorset, whose roof was demolished in 1773, and in Roehampton House
Monmouth_House
Francis Barrington Edmund Bonner Henry Chettle Richard Cox Robert Culliford Robert Daborne John Dickens Thomas Drury John Eliot John Gerard Hannah Glasse
Richard_Shelley
Benedictine monastery in Wiltshire, England
Norman Conquest, vol. 2, London, 1849, pp.416–417. Chettle 1942, p. 47-48. Auch 1913, pp. 60–61. Chettle 1942, p. 37. Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry:
Amesbury_Priory
Housing area within town of Wellingborough, England
century AD. From the 1980s until the early 2000s, strong putrid fumes from Chettles pet food factory along Ditchford Lane would usually blow upwind into Wellingborough
Hemmingwell
English prison reformer and philanthropist (1726–1790)
Taylor, Thomas (1836). Memoirs of John Howard. p. 415. Samuel Birchall (1796). An alphabetical list of provincial copper-coins or tokens. Thomas Gill. p
John_Howard_(prison_reformer)
English Catholic bishop (1500–1569)
George Savage (and therefore grandson of Sir John Savage and great-nephew of Thomas Savage who had also served as Bishop of London, before he became Archbishop
Edmund_Bonner
Village and civil parish in Dorset, England
Blandford St Mary Bourton Bryanston Buckhorn Weston Cann Charlton Marshall Chettle Child Okeford Compton Abbas Durweston East Orchard East Stour Farnham Fifehead
East_Orchard
Chesterton (1874–1936), novelist, poet and essayist, Father Brown Henry Chettle (c. 1564 – c. 1607), playwright William Rufus Chetwood (died 1766), playwright
List_of_English_writers_(A–C)
English peer and music patron
Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 15 November 2013. Chettle, H F; Powell, W R; Spalding, P A; Tillott, P M (1953). "Parishes: West
Willoughby Bertie, 4th Earl of Abingdon
Willoughby_Bertie,_4th_Earl_of_Abingdon
Town in Wiltshire, England
Religious Houses, England and Wales, Longman Greens, London 1953, p. 209. Chettle, H. F.; Powell, W. R.; Spalding, P. A.; Tillott, P. M. (1953). "Parishes:
Melksham
Class of drugs
November 2014. Hervey GR, Knibbs AV, Burkinshaw L, Morgan DB, Jones PR, Chettle DR, Vartsky D (April 1981). "Effects of methandienone on the performance
Anabolic_steroid
Town and civil parish in Dorset, England
literature as Caer Vynnydd y Paladr (The Mountain Fort/City of the Spears) and Thomas Gale records the name as Caer Palladour in his work of 1709. Though "Palladour"
Shaftesbury
English football club season
Pearce (captain; caretaker manager) 4 DF ENG Colin Cooper 5 DF ENG Steve Chettle 6 MF ENG Chris Bart-Williams 7 MF WAL David Phillips 8 MF SCO Scot Gemmill
1996–97 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
1996–97_Nottingham_Forest_F.C._season
Village in Dorset, England
had a light railway serving Shillingstone House, the postwar home of Sir Thomas Salt. The village has a primary school, affiliated to the Church of England
Shillingstone
16th/17th-century English poet and playwright
in collaboration with other Henslowe regulars, like Thomas Dekker, Anthony Munday and Henry Chettle, among others. Of these 23 plays, only one has survived
Michael_Drayton
English football club season
ENG Steve Sutton DF ENG Gary Bowyer DF ENG Gary Charles DF ENG Steve Chettle DF ENG Phil Gilchrist DF ENG Chris Hope DF ENG Brian Laws DF ENG Stuart
1990–91 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
1990–91_Nottingham_Forest_F.C._season
THOMAS CHETTLE
THOMAS CHETTLE
Male
Greek
(Φωκάς) Greek name PHOKAS means "seal," the mammal.
Male
Scottish
Scottish Gaelic form of Greek ThÅmas, TÃ’MAS means "twin."
Male
Dutch
, a twin.
Boy/Male
Irish
The Irish form of Thomas, a biblical name meaning “â€twin.â€â€
Male
English
English form of Greek ThÅmas, THOMAS means "twin." In the New Testament bible, this is the name of one of the twelve apostles. He is referred to as "Thomas, called Didymus," his surname.
Male
Finnish
Finnish form of Greek ThÅmas, TUOMAS means "twin."
Male
Greek
(Θωμᾶς) Greek form of Aramaic Tau'ma, THŌMAS means "twin." In the New Testament bible, this is the name of one of the twelve apostles. He is referred to as "Thomas, called Didymos," his surname.
Female
Spanish
Feminine form of Spanish Tomás, TOMASA means "twin."Â
Male
English
Short form of English Thomas, THOM means "twin."
Boy/Male
Irish
The Irish form of Thomas, a biblical name meaning “â€twin.â€â€
Surname or Lastname
English
English : patronymic from a short form of the personal name Thomas.
Boy/Male
Christian & English(British/American/Australian)
Dependable
Male
Polish
Polish form of Greek ThÅmas, TOMASZ means "twin."
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, Armenian, Australian, Biblical, British, Christian, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Irish, Jamaican, Portuguese, Shakespearean, Swedish, Swiss
Twin
Surname or Lastname
English, French, German, Dutch, Danish, and South Indian
English, French, German, Dutch, Danish, and South Indian : from the medieval personal name, of Biblical origin, from Aramaic t’Åm’a, a byname meaning ‘twin’. It was borne by one of the disciples of Christ, best known for his scepticism about Christ’s resurrection (John 20:24–29). The th- spelling is organic, the initial letter of the name in the Greek New Testament being a theta. The English pronunciation as t rather than th- is the result of French influence from an early date. In Britain the surname is widely distributed throughout the country, but especially common in Wales and Cornwall. The Ukrainian form is Choma.
Female
English
Abbreviated form of English Thomasina, THOMASIN means "twin."Â
Boy/Male
American, Australian, Biblical, British, Chinese, Czech, Czechoslovakian, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Indian, Irish, Netherlands, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Swiss
Twin; A Form of Thomas
Male
Norwegian
Lithuanian and Norwegian form of Greek ThÅmas, TOMAS means "twin."
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Danish, English, French, German, Greek, Norse, Norwegian, Scandinavian, Swedish, Teutonic
Thunder; Thor's Fight; Thor's Struggle; Thor's Goddess
Biblical
a twin
THOMAS CHETTLE
THOMAS CHETTLE
Girl/Female
Anglo Saxon American German Teutonic
Little wealthy one.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Slayer of Canda and Munda
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
God of Lotus
Boy/Male
Anglo Saxon English
Wealthy ruler.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Punjabi, Sikh
God's Wisdom
Girl/Female
American, British, English, French
Joyous; Medieval Male Name Adopted as a Feminine Name
Female
Arthurian
, swelling white wave.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Telugu
Lamp; After Prey who Got You by God
Boy/Male
Danish, Finnish, German, Swedish, Teutonic
Power of the Home; Prosperity and Power
Boy/Male
German, Swedish
Strong in Ing; Ing's Strength
THOMAS CHETTLE
THOMAS CHETTLE
THOMAS CHETTLE
THOMAS CHETTLE
THOMAS CHETTLE
a.
Pertaining to, or characteristic of, Thomas Jefferson or his policy or political doctrines.
a.
Of, pertaining to, or designating, the thymus gland.
n.
Any one of numerous species of marine bivalve mollusks of the genus Pholas, or family Pholadidae. They bore holes for themselves in clay, peat, and soft rocks.
n.
Any species of Pholas; a pholad. See Pholas.
n.
Any species of Pholas.
n.
The second, or middle, region of the body of a crustacean, arachnid, or other articulate animal. In the case of decapod Crustacea, some writers include under the term thorax only the three segments bearing the maxillipeds; others include also the five segments bearing the legs. See Illust. in Appendix.
n.
Alt. of Thomaism
a.
Having thumbs.
n.
A breastplate, cuirass, or corselet; especially, the breastplate worn by the ancient Greeks.
a.
In the thorax.
n.
The doctrine of Thomas Aquinas, esp. with respect to predestination and grace.
n.
One who accepts the doctrines of Thomas Hobbes.
n.
The thorax of Arthropods.
n.
A member of the ancient church of Christians established on the Malabar coast of India, which some suppose to have been originally founded by the Apostle Thomas.
n.
Alt. of Thomean
n.
The middle region of the body of an insect, or that region which bears the legs and wings. It is composed of three united somites, each of which is composed of several distinct parts. See Illust. in Appendix. and Illust. of Coleoptera.
n.
A follower of Thomas Aquinas. See Scotist.
pl.
of Pholas
a.
Set with thorns.
n.
The thymus gland.