What is the name meaning of BOTHE. Phrases containing BOTHE
See name meanings and uses of BOTHE!BOTHE
BOTHE
Surname or Lastname
English, North German, Dutch, Frisian, and Danish
English, North German, Dutch, Frisian, and Danish : from a Germanic personal name, Boio or Bogo, of uncertain origin. It may represent a variant of Bothe, with the regular Low German loss of the dental between vowels, but a cognate name appears to have existed in Old English (see Boyce), where this feature does not occur. Boje is still in use as a personal name in Friesland.Dutch : nickname from Middle Dutch boy(e) ‘boy’, ‘lad’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : probably from an Old English personal name of uncertain origin; perhaps a cognate of Bothe or akin to Butt. However, forms such as Walter le Botte (Oxfordshire 1279) seem to point to a nickname or occupational name, perhaps from Old French bot ‘butt’, ‘cask’, or bot ‘toad’. Compare Bottrell.South German : occupational name for a messenger, from Middle High German bote ‘messenger’, ‘emissary’.Danish : according to Søndergaard, from Dutch bot, both ‘flounder’ (the fish).
Boy/Male
Norse English
Herald.
Boy/Male
American, British, English, Norse
Lives in a Hut
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of various places called Bothel(l), of which there are examples in Cumbria and Northumberland, named with Old English bÅðl ‘dwelling house’, ‘hall’, or a topographic name from this word, denoting someone who lived or worked at the main house in a settlement.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English body, Old English bodig ‘body’, ‘trunk’, presumably denoting a corpulent person. In Middle English the word was also used in the sense ‘individual’, ‘person’.English : occupational name for a messenger, Middle English bode (Old English boda; compare Bothe), with the spelling altered to preserve a disyllabic pronunciation. This development can be clearly traced in Sussex.French : variant of Bodin.Hungarian (Bódy) : variant of Bódi (see Bodi).
Surname or Lastname
English (West Yorkshire)
English (West Yorkshire) : topographic name for someone who lived in a long valley, from Middle English long + botme, bothem ‘valley bottom’. Given the surname’s present-day distribution, Longbottom in Luddenden Foot, West Yorkshire, may be the origin, but there are also two places called Long Bottom in Hampshire, two in Wiltshire, and Longbottom Farm in Somerset and in Wiltshire.
BOTHE
BOTHE
Boy/Male
Bengali, Hindu, Indian
Lovely
Boy/Male
Indian, Tamil
Artist
Girl/Female
Danish, Indian, Latin, Sanskrit, Swedish
Loveable; Desire
Boy/Male
Arabic, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Muslim
The Moon
Girl/Female
Indian
Little rock, Handsome
Boy/Male
Australian, French, German
Yew Wood; Archer
Boy/Male
Tamil
Boy/Male
Arabic, Biblical
Companion; Friend; Destroyed; Dedicated to God
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Fierce; Passionate; Violent
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Lancashire, named with an ancient British river name, perhaps meaning ‘sacred’, ‘holy’.Irish : when not of English origin (see 1 above), a rare reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Seanchaidhe ‘son of the chronicler’, a name found in Sligo and Leitrim, which is more commonly Anglicized as Fox, as the result of an erroneous association with sionnach ‘fox’.
BOTHE
BOTHE
BOTHE
BOTHE
BOTHE
v. t.
To poke; to push; also, to disturb; to confuse; to bother.
v. t.
To annoy; to trouble; to worry; to perplex. See Pother.
n.
One who bothers.
a.
Vexatious; causing bother; causing trouble or perplexity; troublesome.
n.
A state of perplexity or anxiety; confusion; bother; agitation.
n.
One who, or that which, bothers; state of perplexity or annoyance; embarrassment; worry; disturbance; petty trouble; as, to be in a bother.
n.
Bustle; confusion; tumult; flutter; bother.
imp. & p. p.
of Bother
v. i.
To feel care or anxiety; to make or take trouble; to be troublesome.
n.
The act of bothering, or state of being bothered; cause of trouble; perplexity; annoyance; vexation.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Bother
v. t.
To perplex; to embarrass; to confuse; to bother; as, to pudder a man.