Browse Submitted Surnames

This is a list of submitted surnames in which the usage is English; and the first letter is T; and the gender is unisex; and the length is 9.
usage
letter
gender
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Tangerine English
Possibly means "from Tangier".
Taylorson English
Means "son of Taylor".
Templeton English
Derived from Templeton, from the English words 'temple' and 'town'.
Tewksbury English
Derived from Tewkesbury, a market town and civil parish in Gloucestershire, England. It is named with the Old English given name Teodec and burg meaning "fortification".
Thackeray English
Habitational name for a person from the place named Thackray in Yorkshire, from Old Norse þak "thatch, roof" and "corner, nook".
Thackwray English
Means Thatcher, or someone who thatches roofs. A varient of the name Thatcher
Thornburg English
The name Thornburg comes from the Old English thorn broc, because the original bearers lived near a "stream by the thorns" in Buckinghamshire and North Yorkshire.
Thornbury English
From the name of various places in England, derived from Old English þorn "thorn" and burg "fortress, fortification, citadel".
Thornhill English
Habitational name from any of various places named Thornhill in England, from Old English þorn "thorn" and hyll "hill".
Thorogood English
Variant form of Thurgood.
Timberley American, English (Rare)
Means "timber clearing" in English. From the Middle English words tymber, meaning wood trees, and leah, meaning clearing. The name's origin be related to tree farming.... [more]
Todhunter English
From the Old English word todde, meaning "fox", with "hunter",
Tomlinson English
Patronymic from the personal name Tomlin.
Tonkinson English
Means "son of Tonkin".
Townshend English
Variant of Townsend. This surname is borne by the English musician Pete Townshend (1945-).
Treadwell English
Occupational name for a fuller, a person who cleaned and shrunk newly woven cloth by treading it. It is derived from Middle English tred(en) "to tread" and well "well".
Trenfield English (Rare)
Relatives from Gloucestershire
Trevathan English, Cornish
Habitational name from one or more places in Cornwall named Trevethan, from Middle Cornish tre "estate farmstead" with a second element of uncertain meaning. It could be an unrecorded Old Cornish personal name Buthen.
Tuckerton English
Derived from Old English tucian meaning "offend, torment", and tun "enclosure, yard".