What is the name meaning of MULBERRY. Phrases containing MULBERRY
See name meanings and uses of MULBERRY!MULBERRY
MULBERRY
Boy/Male
Australian, Chinese, Vietnamese
Mulberry; Bright; Noble; Mutual
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Malborough (Devon) or Marlborough (Wiltshire). The Wiltshire place name is from an unattested Old English personal name Mǣrla or Old English meargealla ‘gentian’ + beorg ‘hill’, ‘mound’.Irish : possibly a variant of the County Clare surname Malborough, Marlborough, which MacLysaght considers to be probably an Anglicization of Gaelic Ó Maoilbhearaigh (see Mulberry 2).Perhaps also an Americanized form of German Malburg.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Mowbray, altered by folk etymology.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Maoilbhearaigh ‘descendant of the devotee of (Saint) Bearach’.
Girl/Female
Biblical
The place of weeping, or of mulberry-trees.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Morey 2.French : topographic name from French mûrier ‘mulberry tree’, or a habitational name from Mouriez in Pas-de-Calais, or from Mourier in Villers-St-Paul, Oise.French : possibly a short form of Amory, from the Germanic personal name Amalric.
Girl/Female
Biblical
A mulberry-tree.
MULBERRY
MULBERRY
Girl/Female
Tamil
A river
Girl/Female
Hindu
Boy/Male
Arabic, Indian, Muslim, Sindhi
Shooting Star; Piercing; Glistening
Girl/Female
Tamil
Sulalita | ஸà¯à®²à®²à®¿à®¤à®¾
Very pleasing, Greatly pleased or Happy
Boy/Male
African, Arabic, Hindu, Indian, Malaysian, Muslim, Sindhi
The Biblical Aesep; A Prophet's Name
Boy/Male
American, Australian, Dutch, French, Gaelic, Irish
Little Seal; A Pledge
Girl/Female
Tamil
Varija | வாரீஜ஼ா
Lotus
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English, Irish
Cushion; Helpful
Girl/Female
Biblical
Incomparable.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Care of the most gracious (Allah)
MULBERRY
MULBERRY
MULBERRY
MULBERRY
MULBERRY
a.
Having a face of a mulberry color, or blotched as if with mulberry stains.
a.
Having some portion of the floral envelopes attached to the pericarp to form the fruit, as in the checkerberry, the mulberry, and the pineapple.
n.
Any small fleshy fruit, as the strawberry, mulberry, huckleberry, etc.
a.
Of or pertaining to a natural order (Urticaceae) of plants, of which the nettle is the type. The order includes also the hop, the elm, the mulberry, the fig, and many other plants.
n.
A liquid terpene, obtained from the crane's-bill (Geranium maculatum), and having a peculiar mulberry odor.
pl.
of Mulberry
n.
A kind of aggregate fruit in which the ovaries cohere in a solid mass, with a slender receptacle, as in the magnolia; also, a similar multiple fruit, as a mulberry.
n.
Maroon; the color of an unripe black mulberry.
n.
The berry or fruit of any tree of the genus Morus; also, the tree itself. See Morus.
a.
Furnished with foliage; leaved; as, the variously foliaged mulberry.
n.
A fleshy fruit formed by the consolidation of many flowers with their receptacles, ovaries, etc., as the breadfruit, mulberry, and pineapple.
n.
A dark pure color, like the hue of a black mulberry.
a.
Of, pertaining to, or derived from, the mulberry; moric.
n.
A small West Indian tree (Trophis Americana) of the Mulberry family, whose leaves and twigs are used as fodder for cattle.
n.
A small abscess or tumor having a resemblance to a mulberry.
n.
A kind of cloth prepared by the Polynesians from the inner bark of the paper mulberry; -- sometimes called also kapa.
n.
The sphere or globular mass of cells (blastomeres), formed by the clevage of the ovum or egg in the first stages of its development; -- called also mulberry mass, segmentation sphere, and blastosphere. See Segmentation.
n.
A genus of trees, some species of which produce edible fruit; the mulberry. See Mulberry.