xmaonx's Personal Name List

Winchester
Usage: English
Pronounced: WIN-chehs-tər
From an English place name, derived from Venta, of Celtic origin, and Latin castrum meaning "camp, fortress".
Verdier
Usage: French, Norman, English
Occupational name for a forester. Derived from Old French verdier (from Late Latin viridarius, a derivative of viridis "green"). Also an occupational name for someone working in a garden or orchard, or a topographic name for someone living near one. From Occitan verdier "orchard".
Valerian
Usage: French
Valentine
Usage: English, Scottish
Tremaine
Usage: Cornish
Pronounced: TREH-mayn(English)
Variant of Tremayne. A famous fictional bearer is Lady Tremaine, the main antagonist of Disney's Cinderella (1950).
Theriault
Usage: French (Rare)
Possibly from the Greek "therion" which means a beast of a nondescript nature.
Sylvester
Usage: English
From the given name Sylvester.
Swithun
Usage: English (Rare)
Rosenthal
Usage: German, Jewish
name for any of numerous places named rosenthal or rosendahl. means " rose valley"
Rosenheim
Usage: German (Rare)
Derived from "home of roses".
Roscoe
Usage: English
Pronounced: RAHS-ko
From the name of a town in Lancashire, derived from Old Norse "roebuck" and skógr "wood, forest".
Randolph
Usage: English, German
Classicized spelling of Randolf, a Germanic personal name composed of the elements rand "rim (of a shield), shield" and wolf "wolf". This was introduced into England by Scandinavian settlers in the Old Norse form Rannúlfr, and was reinforced after the Norman Conquest by the Norman form Randolf.
Prescott
Usage: English
Pronounced: PREHS-kət, PREHS-kaht
From the name of various English places meaning "priest's cottage" in Old English.
Mercier
Usage: French
French form of Mercer.
Lévesque
Usage: French
Pronounced: LEH-VEHK
Derived from French évêque, a cognate of Bishop.
Lavoisier
Usage: French
Lavigne
Usage: French
Pronounced: LA-VEEN
Means "the vineyard" in French, referring to a person who lived close to a vineyard, or was from the town of Lavigny.
Fortescue
Usage: French
Means 'strong shield' from French elements fort meaning "strong" and escu meaning "shield#
Faire
Usage: English
Everett
Usage: English
Pronounced: EHV-ə-rit, EHV-rit
From the given name Everard.
Emerson
Usage: English
Pronounced: EHM-ər-sən
Means "son of Emery". The surname was borne by Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), an American writer and philosopher who wrote about transcendentalism.
Elsevier
Usage: Dutch (Rare)
Edevane
Usage: Welsh, Cornish
A rare Welsh surname, believed to be of Cornish origin. This surname is made up of two elements. ‘Ed’ is not a shortened form of Edward, but derives from the ancient (Old English?) ‘ead’ meaning ‘prosperity’ and/or ‘happiness’. This also gave rise to names like Edmund (‘prosperity protector’), Edward, (meaning ‘prosperity guardian’) and Edwin (‘prosperity friend’). The second element, ‘vean’ or ‘vane’ means ‘little’ or ‘the younger’. The Cornish ‘byghan’ became mutated in the same way as the Welsh ‘bychan’ became ‘fychan’ (i.e. ‘vychan’) when added to a personal name, and performed the same service of distinguishing between father and son where they had the same name. In Wales, this ultimately led to the well-known surname Vaughan. Edevane and variants, therefore, would seem to have the sense ‘the younger happy one’ or ‘the younger prosperous one’.
Devereux
Usage: English
Pronounced: DEHV-ə-roo
Indicated a person from Evreux in France, itself named after the Gaulish tribe of the Eburovices, which was probably derived from a Celtic word meaning "yew".
Desrosiers
Usage: French
Means "from the rose bushes", from French rosier "rose bush". It probably referred to a person who lived close to, or cared for a rose garden.
Deslauriers
Usage: French (Quebec)
A topographic name for someone living among laurels, a combination of the fused preposition and plural definite article des ‘from the’ + the plural of Old French lorier ‘laurel’.
Delacroix
Usage: French
Pronounced: DEH-LA-KRWA
Means "of the cross" in French. It denoted one who lived near a cross symbol or near a crossroads. A notable bearer was the French painter Eugène Delacroix (1798-1863).
Darlington
Usage: English
From Old English Dearthington believed to be the settlement of Deornoth's people (unclear root + ing a family group + ton an enclosed farm or homestead).
Chevalier
Usage: French
Pronounced: SHU-VA-LYEH
From a nickname derived from French chevalier meaning "knight", from Late Latin caballarius "horseman", Latin caballus "horse".
Cavendish
Usage: English (?)
Pronounced: ca-ven-dish
Belrose
Usage: French
Variant of Bellerose.
Bellerose
Usage: French
Means "beautiful rose" in French.
Bélanger
Usage: French
From the given name Bérenger.
Beauvais
Usage: French
From French place names derived from "beautiful sight".
Beaumont
Usage: French, English
Pronounced: BO-MAWN(French) BO-mahnt(English)
From French place names derived from beau "beautiful" and mont "mountain".
Beauchêne
Usage: French
Pronounced: BO-SHEHN
From French place names derived from beau "beautiful" and chêne "oak".
Avery
Usage: English
Pronounced: AY-və-ree, AYV-ree
Derived from a Norman French form of the given names Alberich or Alfred.
Averne
Usage: Anglo-Saxon
Possibly deriving from the Olde English "fearn", meaning fern.
Ambrose
Usage: English
From the Late Latin name Ambrosius, which was derived from the Greek name Αμβροσιος (Ambrosios) meaning "immortal".
Altheimer
Usage: English
Aldane
Usage: Anglo-Saxon
Derived from "dweller at the old enclosure".
Abernathy
Usage: Scottish
Pronounced: Aber-nath-y
A different form of Abernethy, which originally meant "person from Abernethy", Perth and Kinross ("confluence of the (river) Nethy"). This was one of the surnames of the Scots who settled in northern Ireland during the ‘plantation’ in the 17th century, and it was brought to the U.S. as the name of a Southern plantation owner.
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