Impala1729's Personal Name List

Addington
Usage: English
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
Habitational name from any of various places named in Old English as Eaddingtun 'settlement associated with Eadda' or Æddingtun 'settlement associated with Æddi'.
Ames
Usage: English
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Derived from the Old French and Middle English personal name Amys, Amice, which is either directly from Latin amicus ‘friend’, used as a personal name, or via a Late Latin derivative of this, Amicius.
Ashe
Usage: Irish, English, Caribbean
Rating: 36% based on 5 votes
Asher
Usage: English
Pronounced: ASH-ər
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
Name for someone who dwelled by an ash tree, from Middle English asche or asshe meaning "ash tree".
Bailey
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAY-lee
Rating: 45% based on 4 votes
From Middle English baili meaning "bailiff", which comes via Old French from Latin baiulus "porter".
Bane
Usage: English
Rating: 25% based on 4 votes
Variant of Bain.
Barley
Usage: English
Rating: 18% based on 4 votes
Barlow
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAHR-lo
Rating: 18% based on 4 votes
Derived from a number of English place names that variously mean "barley hill", "barn hill", "boar clearing" or "barley clearing".
Bay
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAY
Rating: 53% based on 4 votes
From the Middle English given name Baye.
Baylor
Usage: German (Anglicized)
Rating: 33% based on 4 votes
Possibly an Americanized form of Beiler.
Beam
Usage: English
Rating: 15% based on 4 votes
From Old English beam "beam" or "post". It could be a topographic name from someone living near a post or tree, or it could be a metonymic occupational name for a weaver.

Americanized form of German Boehm or Baum.

Becker
Usage: German
Pronounced: BEH-ku
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Derived from Middle High German becker meaning "baker".
Bell 1
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHL
Rating: 33% based on 4 votes
From Middle English belle meaning "bell". It originated as a nickname for a person who lived near the town bell, or who had a job as a bell-ringer.
Belle
Usage: English
Rating: 50% based on 4 votes
Possibly a variant of Bell 1 or Bell 2.
Bellerose
Usage: French
Rating: 54% based on 5 votes
Means "beautiful rose" in French.
Belli
Usage: Maltese
Rating: 10% based on 4 votes
Bohannon
Usage: Irish (Anglicized)
Rating: 5% based on 4 votes
Irish anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Buadhachanáin, a double diminutive of buadhach ‘victorious’
Bovary
Usage: French
Rating: 5% based on 4 votes
It is the surname of the famous fictional character Emma Bovary protagonist of Gustave Flaubert's novel.
Bowman
Usage: English
Pronounced: BO-mən
Rating: 17% based on 3 votes
Occupational name for an archer, derived from Middle English bowe, Old English boga meaning "bow".
Brady
Usage: Irish
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Anglicized form of the Irish name Ó Brádaigh meaning "descendant of Brádach". A famous bearer is the American football quarterback Tom Brady (1977-).
Brennan
Usage: Irish
Rating: 43% based on 4 votes
From Irish Ó Braonáin meaning "descendant of Braonán", a byname meaning "rain, moisture, drop" (with a diminutive suffix).
Carter
Usage: English
Pronounced: KAHR-tər
Rating: 40% based on 4 votes
Occupational name for a person who operated a cart to transport goods, from Norman French caretier. A famous bearer is the former American president Jimmy Carter (1924-).
Caulfield
Usage: English
From a place name meaning "cold field", from Old English ceald "cold" and feld "pasture, field".
Cherry
Usage: English
Pronounced: ch-EH-ree
Rating: 20% based on 3 votes
From Middle English chirie, cherye "cherry", hence a metonymic occupational name for a grower or seller of cherries, or possibly a nickname for someone with rosy cheeks.
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The surname Cherry was brought to England by a great wave of migration following the Norman Conquest of 1066. The name Cherry is derived from the Anglo Norman French word, 'cherise', which means cherry, and was probably used to indicate someone who lived by a cherry tree.

86,045 people have this surname, and is most prevalent in the United States.

Clancy
Usage: Irish (Anglicized)
Rating: 25% based on 4 votes
Anglicized form of Mac Fhlannchaidh.
Clary
Usage: Irish, French
Rating: 50% based on 4 votes
Variant of Cleary
Clover
Usage: English
Pronounced: clo-ver
Rating: 33% based on 4 votes
Connor
Usage: Irish
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Variant of O'Connor.
Corday
Usage: French
Pronounced: KOR-day(English) KOR-DAY(French)
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Either from the French word corde meaning "cord/rope/string", or from the Latin word cor meaning "heart." This was the surname of Charlotte Corday, the assassin who killed Jacobin leader Jean-Paul Marat during the French revolution.
Cordero
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: kor-DEH-ro
Rating: 10% based on 4 votes
Means "lamb" in Spanish, either used as an occupational name for a shepherd or a religious name referring to Jesus as the Lamb of God.
Córdova
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: KOR-dho-ba
Rating: 20% based on 3 votes
Variant of Córdoba.
Coverdale
Usage: English (British)
Rating: 20% based on 3 votes
From the valley (Dale) of the river Cover.

Miles (Myles) Coverdale, Bishop of Exeter during the reign of Henry VIII, was the first person to translate the complete Bible into English, in 1535.

Covey
Usage: Irish, English
Rating: 17% based on 3 votes
Irish: reduced form of MacCovey, an Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Cobhthaigh (see Coffey).
English (Surrey and West Sussex): unexplained.
Culpepper
Usage: English
Means "person who collects, prepares and/or sells herbs and spices" (from Middle English cullen "to pick" + pepper).
Dallimore
Usage: English
Pronounced: DALL-i-mor
An English surname probably derived from the French de la mare, meaning "of the sea", though some contend that "mare" springs from the English word moor. This surname probably arose after the Norman conquest of Britain.
Dean 1
Usage: English
Pronounced: DEEN
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Derived from Middle English dene meaning "valley".
Decker
Usage: American
Pronounced: deck-UR
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Dexter
Usage: English
Pronounced: DEHK-stər
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Occupational name meaning "dyer" in Old English (originally this was a feminine word, but it was later applied to men as well).
Dior
Usage: French
Pronounced: DYAWR
Rating: 27% based on 3 votes
Possibly from French doré meaning "golden". A famous bearer was the French fashion designer Christian Dior (1905-1957).
Domingo
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: do-MEENG-go
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
From the given name Domingo.
Easton
Usage: English
Pronounced: EES-tən
Rating: 38% based on 4 votes
From the name of various places meaning "east town" in Old English.
Eaton
Usage: English
Pronounced: EE-tən
Rating: 8% based on 4 votes
From any of the various English towns with this name, derived from Old English ea "river" and tun "enclosure, yard, town".
Eden
Usage: German
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
Eiris
Usage: Old Irish (Latinized)
Rating: 20% based on 3 votes
Its meaning That is fruitfulness or fertility. It comes from the Irish name Eire Or Eriu (Erin, Eirinn). Another ancient name is Ivernia (Hibernia or Iverni) and its meaning is the green and fertile lands.
Elestial
Usage: English (British, Modern, Rare)
Pronounced: EE-LESS-TEAL(British English)
Rating: 27% based on 3 votes
First used as a surname in September 2000, first appearing on a birth certificate in July 2009. Meaning "protected by angels"; the origin is an adopted surname from a type of quartz crystal, often referred to as a new millennium crystal. The el as a prefix is of, or pertaining to and relates to celestial or heavenly.
Everdale
Usage: English
Rating: 52% based on 5 votes
Everdeen
Usage: Literature
Pronounced: eh-ver-DEEN
Rating: 20% based on 3 votes
Everhart
Usage: German
Rating: 23% based on 3 votes
Variant of Eberhardt.
Everly
Usage: English
Pronounced: EHV-ər-lee
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
From place names meaning derived from Old English eofor "boar" and leah "woodland, clearing".
Faraday
Usage: Irish
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
From Irish Gaelic Ó Fearadaigh "descendant of Fearadach", a personal name probably based on fear "man", perhaps meaning literally "man of the wood". A famous bearer was British chemist and physicist Michael Faraday (1791-1867).
Fenn
Usage: English
Pronounced: FEHN
Rating: 17% based on 3 votes
From a name for someone who dwelt near a marsh, from Old English fenn meaning "fen, swamp, bog".
Frey
Usage: German
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
Status name for a free man, as opposed to a bondsman or serf, in the feudal system, from Middle High German vri "free", "independent".
Gibb
Usage: English
Pronounced: GIB
Rating: 17% based on 3 votes
Derived from the given name Gib.
Gibbon
Usage: English
Rating: 10% based on 4 votes
English from the medieval personal name Gibbon, a pet form of Gibb.
Gibbons
Usage: English
Pronounced: GIB-inz
Rating: 20% based on 3 votes
Patronymic formed from a diminutive of Gib.
Gibbs
Usage: English, Scottish
Pronounced: GIBZ(English)
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Means "son of Gib".
Grey
Usage: English
Pronounced: GRAY
Rating: 23% based on 4 votes
Variant of Gray.
Guthrie
Usage: Scottish, Irish
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
As a Scottish surname, this is either a habitational name for a person from the village of Guthrie near Forfar, itself from Gaelic gaothair meaning "windy place" (a derivative of gaoth "wind") and the locative suffix -ach, or alternatively it might possibly be an Anglicized form of Scottish Gaelic Mag Uchtre meaning "son of Uchtre", a personal name of uncertain origin, perhaps related to uchtlach "child".

As an Irish surname, it was adopted as an English translation of Gaelic Ó Fhlaithimh "descendant of Flaitheamh", a byname meaning "prince". This is the result of an erroneous association of the Gaelic name in the form Ó Fhlaithimh (Fh- being silent) with the Gaelic word laithigh "mud", and of mud with gutters, and an equally erroneous association of the Scottish surname Guthrie with the word gutter.

Halliwell
Usage: English
Rating: 48% based on 4 votes
Derived from various place names in England named with Old English halig "holy" and well "spring, well".
Hallow
Usage: English
Rating: 23% based on 3 votes
English: topographic name from Middle English hal(l)owes ‘nooks’, ‘hollows’, from Old English halh (see Hale). In some cases the name may be genitive, rather than plural, in form, with the sense ‘relative or servant of the dweller in the nook’.
Hallowell
Usage: English
Rating: 27% based on 3 votes
Variant of Halliwell meaning "holy spring".
Hart
Usage: English
Pronounced: HAHRT
Rating: 10% based on 4 votes
Means "male deer". It was originally acquired by a person who lived in a place frequented by harts, or bore some resemblance to a hart.
Hayes 2
Usage: Irish
Pronounced: HAYZ(English)
Rating: 50% based on 4 votes
Anglicized form of Irish Ó hAodha meaning "descendant of Aodh".
Haze
Usage: English
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
Holden
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: Hold en
Rating: 23% based on 3 votes
Honey
Usage: English
Rating: 48% based on 4 votes
Hooper
Usage: English
Pronounced: HOO-pər
Rating: 5% based on 4 votes
Occupational name for someone who put the metal hoops around wooden barrels.
Hunter
Usage: English, Scottish
Pronounced: HUN-tər(English)
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Occupational name that referred to someone who hunted for a living, from Old English hunta.
Kavanagh
Usage: Irish
Pronounced: KAV-ə-naw(English)
Rating: 40% based on 5 votes
Derived from the Irish Gaelic name Caomhánach, which means "a student of saint Caomhán". It was the name used by a 12th-century king of Leinster, Domhnall Caomhánach, the eldest son of the historic Irish king Diarmait Mac Murchada.
King
Usage: English
Pronounced: KING
Rating: 8% based on 4 votes
From Old English cyning "king", originally a nickname for someone who either acted in a kingly manner or who worked for or was otherwise associated with a king. A famous bearer was the American civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. (1929-1968).
Loxley
Usage: English
Rating: 48% based on 4 votes
English: habitational name from any of various minor places named Loxley, as for example one in Warwickshire, which is named with the Old English personal name Locc + leah ‘woodland clearing’.
Loxley
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: LAHKS-lee
Rating: 10% based on 4 votes
Transferred use of the surname Loxley.
Luster
Usage: English
Rating: 17% based on 3 votes
Variant of Lester.
McCoy
Usage: Scottish
Rating: 46% based on 5 votes
Anglicized form of MacAoidh.
McGinty
Usage: Irish
Rating: 23% based on 4 votes
Anglicized form of Mac an tSaoi, meaning "son of the scholar".
Meadows
Usage: English
Pronounced: MEHD-oz
Rating: 40% based on 4 votes
Referred to one who lived in a meadow, from Old English mædwe.
Miller
Usage: English
Pronounced: MIL-ər
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Occupational surname meaning "miller", referring to a person who owned or worked in a grain mill, derived from Middle English mille "mill".
Moon 2
Usage: English
Pronounced: MOON
Rating: 48% based on 4 votes
Originally indicated a person from the town of Moyon in Normandy.
Moone
Usage: English
Rating: 13% based on 3 votes
Nary
Usage: Old Irish
Pronounced: Nare-ee
Rating: 13% based on 3 votes
An anglicized form of the Gaelic surname O Naraigh. This surname is derived from the personal name Narach which means modest.
Nóvoa
Usage: Galician
Rating: 23% based on 3 votes
Habitational name from the former Galician juridical district Terra de Nóvoa, in Ourense province.
Oliver
Usage: English, Catalan, German, French
Pronounced: AHL-i-vər(English) O-lee-vu(German)
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
Derived from the given name Oliver.
Pennywell
Usage: English
Rating: 33% based on 4 votes
English habitational name from Pennywell in Tyne and Wear or from a similarly named lost place elsewhere.
Pike
Usage: English, Irish
Rating: 17% based on 3 votes
English: topographic name for someone who lived by a hill with a sharp point, from Old English pic ‘point’, ‘hill’, which was a relatively common place name element.
English: metonymic occupational name for a pike fisherman or nickname for a predatory individual, from Middle English pike.
English: metonymic occupational name for a user of a pointed tool for breaking up the earth, Middle English pike.
English: metonymic occupational name for a medieval foot soldier who used a pike, a weapon consisting of a sharp pointed metal end on a long pole, Middle English pic (Old French pique, of Germanic origin).
English: nickname for a tall, thin person, from a transferred sense of one of the above.
English: from a Germanic personal name (derived from the root ‘sharp’, ‘pointed’), found in Middle English and Old French as Pic.
English: nickname from Old French pic ‘woodpecker’, Latin picus. Compare Pye and Speight.
Irish: in the south, of English origin; in Ulster a variant Anglicization of Gaelic Mac Péice (see McPeake).
Americanized spelling of German Peik, from Middle Low German pek ‘sharp, pointed tool or weapon’.
Piper
Usage: English
Pronounced: PIE-pər
Rating: 40% based on 4 votes
Originally given to a person who played on a pipe (a flute).
Prince
Usage: English, French
Rating: 13% based on 3 votes
Nickname from Middle English, Old French prince (Latin princeps), presumably denoting someone who behaved in a regal manner or who had won the title in some contest of skill.
Radley
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English (American, Rare)
Rating: 27% based on 3 votes
Transferred use of the surname Radley.
Raigon
Usage: Spanish
Rating: 13% based on 3 votes
Reaser
Usage: German (Anglicized)
Pronounced: REE-sər(English)
Rating: 5% based on 4 votes
Americanized form of Rieser. A famous bearer is American actress Elizabeth Reaser (1975-).
Reed
Usage: English
Pronounced: REED
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Variant of Read 1.
Remington
Usage: English
Pronounced: REHM-ing-tən
Rating: 38% based on 4 votes
From the name of the town of Rimington in Lancashire, derived from the name of the stream Riming combined with Old English tun meaning "enclosure, town".
Riley 2
Usage: Irish
Pronounced: RIE-lee(English)
Rating: 40% based on 4 votes
Variant of Reilly.
Riva
Usage: Italian
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Means "bank, shore" in Italian, from Latin ripa, denoting one who lived by a river or a lake.
Rivera
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: ree-BEH-ra
Rating: 33% based on 4 votes
From Spanish ribera meaning "bank, shore", from Latin riparius.
Rivers
Usage: English
Pronounced: RIV-ərz
Rating: 50% based on 4 votes
Denoted a person who lived near a river, from Middle English, from Old French riviere meaning "river", from Latin riparius meaning "riverbank".
Rose 1
Usage: English, French, German, Jewish
Pronounced: ROZ(English, French) RO-zə(German)
Rating: 60% based on 4 votes
Means "rose" from Middle English, Old French and Middle High German rose, all from Latin rosa. All denote a person of a rosy complexion or a person who lived in an area abundant with roses. As a Jewish surname it is ornamental, from Yiddish רויז (roiz).
Rosenberg
Usage: German, Swedish, Jewish
Rating: 40% based on 4 votes
Means "rose mountain" in German and Swedish. As a Swedish and Jewish name it is ornamental.
Shaye
Usage: English (Rare)
Rating: 33% based on 3 votes
Silver
Usage: English
Pronounced: SIL-vər
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
From a nickname for a person with grey hair, from Old English seolfor "silver".
Sloane
Usage: Irish
Rating: 40% based on 4 votes
Variant of Sloan.
Snyder
Usage: English
Pronounced: SNIE-dər
Rating: 24% based on 5 votes
Means "tailor", derived from Middle English snithen "to cut", an occupational name for a person who stitched coats and clothing.
Star
Usage: German, Dutch, Jewish, English
Rating: 50% based on 4 votes
German and Jewish (Ashkenazic): nickname from German Star, Middle High German star, ‘starling’, probably denoting a talkative or perhaps a voracious person.
Dutch: nickname either for a gloomy person or for someone who was rigid and inflexible, from Middle Dutch staer ‘having a troubled or gloomy expression’; ‘tight’, ‘stiff’.
English translation of German and Jewish Stern 2.
Slovenian: from the adjective star ‘old’ (see Stare).
Summers 1
Usage: English
Pronounced: SUM-ərz
Rating: 25% based on 4 votes
Variant of Sumner.
Talbot
Usage: English
Pronounced: TAL-bət, TAWL-bət
Rating: 20% based on 2 votes
Of Norman origin, possibly derived from an unattested Germanic given name composed of the elements dala "to destroy" and bod "message".
Tanner
Usage: English
Pronounced: TAN-ər
Rating: 38% based on 4 votes
Occupational name for a person who tanned animal hides, from Old English tannian "to tan", itself from Late Latin and possibly ultimately of Celtic origin.
Targaryen
Usage: Literature
Rating: 8% based on 4 votes
Created by author George R. R. Martin for his series A Song of Ice and Fire, published beginning 1996, and the television adaptation Game of Thrones (2011-2019). The Targaryens were the rulers of Westeros for almost 300 years until shortly before the beginning of the first novel. The name is presumably from the Valyrian language, though Martin provides no explanation of the meaning.
Tarragon
Usage: French (Rare)
Rating: 30% based on 5 votes
Tate
Usage: English
Pronounced: TAYT
Rating: 46% based on 5 votes
Derived from the Old English given name Tata.
Tatum
Usage: English
Rating: 50% based on 5 votes
Variant of Tatham.
Thackery
Usage: English
Rating: 18% based on 4 votes
English (Yorkshire) habitational name from Thackray in the parish of Great Timble, West Yorkshire, now submerged in Fewston reservoir. It was named with Old Norse þak ‘thatching’, ‘reeds’ + (v)rá ‘nook’, ‘corner’.
Vadas
Usage: Hungarian
Pronounced: VAW-dawsh
Rating: 15% based on 4 votes
From Hungarian vad meaning "wild", either a nickname or an occupational name for a hunter of wild game.
Vale
Usage: English
Pronounced: VAYL
Rating: 25% based on 4 votes
Topographic name for someone who lived in a valley, Middle English vale (Old French val, from Latin vallis). The surname is now also common in Ireland, where it has been Gaelicized as de Bhál.
Wesley
Usage: English
Pronounced: WEHS-lee, WEHZ-lee
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Variant of Westley.
Willoughby
Usage: English
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
From the name of various English towns, derived from Old English welig "willow" and Old Norse býr "farm, settlement".
Willows
Usage: English (British)
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
This is an English residential or perhaps occupational surname. It may originate from one of the various places in England called 'The Willows', or even a place such as Newton le Willows in Lancashire, or it may describe a supplier of willow.
Winchester
Usage: English
Pronounced: WIN-chehs-tər
Rating: 25% based on 4 votes
From an English place name, derived from Venta, of Celtic origin, and Latin castrum meaning "camp, fortress".
Wolf
Usage: German, English
Pronounced: VAWLF(German) WUWLF(English)
Rating: 33% based on 4 votes
From Middle High German or Middle English wolf meaning "wolf", or else from an Old German given name beginning with this element.
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