What is the name meaning of COALE. Phrases containing COALE
See name meanings and uses of COALE!COALE
Look up Coale in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Coale is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Ansley J. Coale (1917–2002), American demographer
to 2021. Coale was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2016. Coale grew up in Healdton, Oklahoma and married Dane Scott Coale (born 1964)
John Purcell Coale (born December 21, 1946) is an American lawyer who has served as the United States special envoy to Belarus since November 2025 and
Ansley Johnson Coale (November 14, 1917 – November 5, 2002), was one of America's foremost demographers. A native to Baltimore, Maryland, he earned his
James M. Coale (died February 22, 1882) was an American politician and lawyer from Maryland. He served as a member of the Maryland House of Delegates
Daniel Kinsman Coale (June 27, 1988) is an American former football wide receiver. He played college football at Virginia Tech. Coale was a versatile player
Great Leap Forward has been estimated with different methods. Banister, Coale, and Ashton et al. compare age cohorts from the 1953, 1964, and 1982 censuses
work and live together. Breeds was cast as the title character Miranda Coale after a competitive audition process, however the pilot was never aired
Oklahoma hired former Norman High School women's basketball coach Sherri Coale to the same position at the university. The Sooner women's basketball team
Sharp 2000: Coale 2001: Coale 2002: Patterson 2003: Conradt 2004: Conradt 2005: Mulkey 2006: Coale 2007: Blair 2008: Patterson 2009: Coale 2010: Yori 2011:
COALE
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Middle English personal name Aldred, which represents a coalescence of two Old English personal names: Ealdrǣd ‘ancient counsel’ and Æ{dh}elrǣd (Ethelred) ‘noble counsel’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from a Middle English personal name, Ailric, Alrich, Aldrich, etc. (Many different forms are recorded.) It represents the coalescence of at least two Old English personal names, Ælfrīc ‘elf ruler’ and Æ{dh}elrīc ‘noble ruler’.The earliest recorded bearer of this surname in North America is George Alrich, who came from Derbyshire to MA in 1631.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from a Middle English personal name, Ailward, representing a coalescence of at least two Old English names: Æ{dh}elweard ‘noble guardian’ and Ælfweard ‘elf guardian’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a deacon, or perhaps more probably for his servant. In Middle English two forms coalesced: deakne, from Old English, and diacne, from Old French. Both are ultimately from Late Latin diaconus, from Greek diakonos ‘servant’.Irish : when not of English origin; it was taken to Ireland in the 17th century, it may be an Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Deocáin ‘descendant of Deocán’, a personal name of uncertain derivation and meaning.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Middle English personal name Alstan, which is a coalescence of several different Old English personal names: Æ{dh}elstÄn ‘noble stone’, ÆlfstÄn ‘elf stone’, EaldstÄn ‘old stone’, or EalhstÄn ‘altar stone’.English : habitational name from any of various places called Alston (in Cumbria, Lancashire, Devon, and Somerset) or Alstone (in Gloucestershire and Staffordshire). With the exception of Alston in Cumbria, which is formed with the Old Scandinavian personal name Halfdan, these place names all consist of an Old English personal name + Old English tÅ«n ‘settlement’, for example Ælfsige in the case of Alstone in Gloucestershire.English : In 1682 John Alston of Hammersmith, Middlesex, England, began a seven-year apprenticeship to James Jones, merchant, of Charleston, SC. He had many prominent descendants, among whom the name is often spelled Allston.
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from the Old Norse personal name Ãsmundr, composed of the elements ás ‘god’ + mund ‘protection’. This was established in England before the Conquest, coalescing with the independent Old English form ÅŒsmund, and was later reinforced by the Norman Osmund.
Surname or Lastname
English (West Midlands)
English (West Midlands) : nickname for a swarthy person, from Old English colig ‘dark’, ‘black’ (a derivative of col ‘(char)coal’).English : possibly a habitational name from Coaley in Gloucestershire, named in Old English as ‘woodland clearing (lēah) with a hut or shelter (cofa)’.Probably an Americanized form of Swiss German Kohli or Kohler.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Cole.Possibly an Americanized spelling of German Koll.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from a Middle English personal name, Seric, which represents a coalescence of two Old English personal names, Sǣrīc (composed of sǣ ‘sea’ + rīc ‘power’) and Sigerīc (composed sige ‘victory’ + rīc ‘power’). This would normally have given modern English Serrich, but the form has been altered under the influence of Old French surreis ‘southerner’ (see 2 below).English : regional name for someone who had migrated from the South, from Old French surreis ‘southerner’.English : habitational name from a place in the parish of Morebath, Devon, so named from Old English sūð ‘south’ + hrycg ‘ridge’.
Surname or Lastname
English and German
English and German : from a Middle English personal name, Ode, in which personal names of several different origins have coalesced: principally Old English Od(d)a, Old Norse Od(d)a and Continental Germanic Odo, Otto. The first two are short forms of names with the first element Old English ord, Old Norse odd ‘point of a weapon’. The Continental Germanic names are from a short form of compound names with the first element od- ‘possessions’, ‘riches’. The situation is further confused by the fact that all of these names were Latinized as Odo. Odo was the name of the half-brother of the Conqueror, archbishop of Bayeux, who accompanied the Norman expedition to England and was rewarded with 439 confiscated manors. The German name Odo or Otto was a hereditary name in the Saxon ruling house, as well as being borne by Otto von Wittelsbach, who founded the Bavarian ruling dynasty in the 11th century, and the 12th-century Otto of Bamberg, apostle of Pomerania.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a transporter of goods, Middle English cartere, from an agent derivative of Middle English cart(e) or from Anglo-Norman French car(e)tier, a derivative of Old French caret (see Cartier). The Old French word coalesced with the earlier Middle English word cart(e) ‘cart’, which is from either Old Norse kartr or Old English cræt, both of which, like the Late Latin word, were probably originally derived from Celtic.Northern Irish : reduced form of McCarter.
COALE
COALE
Male
Spanish
Variant spelling of Spanish Emidio, AMIDIO means "demigod; half-god."Â
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Traditional
Another Name of Lord Shiva
Male
English
Anglicized form of Hebrew Abiyshalowm, ABISHALOM means "father of peace." In the bible, this is the name of the father-in-law of Rehoboam.Â
Boy/Male
English
King of Babilon
Girl/Female
Tamil
Triguni | தà¯à®°à¯€à®•ூநீ
The three dimensions
Boy/Male
Hindu
A Jain saint, Lord Vishnu
Girl/Female
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
A New Beginning
Boy/Male
British, English, German, Norse, Teutonic
Lord; A Variant of the Name Ifor
Boy/Male
Hindu
God
Boy/Male
Hindu
Truth seeking, Talented
COALE
COALE
COALE
COALE
COALE
n.
To grow together; to unite by growth into one body; as, the parts separated by a wound coalesce.
a.
Connate or coalescent at the base so as to produce a broad foliaceous body through the center of which the stem passes; -- applied to leaves, as the leaves of the boneset.
n.
A contagious febrile disorder commencing with catarrhal symptoms, and marked by the appearance on the third day of an eruption of distinct red circular spots, which coalesce in a crescentic form, are slightly raised above the surface, and after the fourth day of the eruption gradually decline; rubeola.
imp. & p. p.
of Coalesce
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Coalesce
v. i.
To fit as if by joints; to coalesce as joints do; as, the stones joint, neatly.
n.
The union or coalescence of bones; also, the place of union or coalescence; as, the symphysis of the lower jaw. Cf. Articulation.
a.
Having two coalescent cotyledons, as the live oak and the horse-chestnut.
n.
To unite in one body or product; to combine into one body or community; as, vapors coalesce.
v. i.
To unite by a coalescence of parts; to fit together; to join.
n.
The state of not coalescing.
n. pl.
An extensive division of rhizopods in which the pseudopodia are more or less slender and coalesce at certain points, forming irregular meshes. It includes the shelled Foraminifera, together with some groups which lack a true shell.
v. i.
To become the same; to coalesce in interest, purpose, use, effect, etc.
v. i.
To collect, unite, or coalesce in a round mass.
v. i.
To be allied, confederated, or associated; to coalescence.
v. i.
To unite in a body, a mass, or a collection; to coalesce.
a.
Closely united by the coalescence, or sticking together, of contiguous faces, as in the case of the cotyledons of the live-oak acorn.
v. i.
To become one; to be cemented or consolidated; to combine, as by adhesion or mixture; to coalesce; to grow together.
v. i.
To unite by the intervention of some glutinous substance; to coalesce.
n.
Coalescence; a growing into one with another word.