What is the name meaning of NEWTON. Phrases containing NEWTON
See name meanings and uses of NEWTON!NEWTON
NEWTON
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Newton.Probably a translation of equivalents in other European languages, such as French Neuville or German Neustadt.
Male
English
Short form of English Newton, NEWT means "new settlement."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : probably a variant spelling of Bircham, a habitational name from a group of villages in Norfolk (Great Bircham, Bircham Newton, and Bircham Tofts), named with Old English brÄ“c ‘newly cultivated ground’ + hÄm ‘homestead’. There is also a Bircham in Devon, named with Old English birce ‘birch’ + hÄm or hamm ‘enclosure hemmed in by water’, which could have given rise to the surname.
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, Australian, British, Christian, English, French, Jamaican
From the New Estate; New Town; New Settlement
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the many places so named, from Old English nēowe ‘new’ + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’. According to Ekwall, this is the commonest English place name. For this reason, the surname has a highly fragmented origin.
Boy/Male
Anglo Saxon American English
From the new estate.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a sheepshearer or someone who used shears to trim the surface of finished cloth and remove excess nap, from Middle English shereman ‘shearer’.Americanized spelling of German Schuermann.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : occupational name for a tailor, from Yiddish sher ‘scissors’ + man ‘man’.Roger Sherman (1722–93), the only man to sign all three documents at the foundation of the American republic (the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the U.S. Constitution), was born in Newton, MA, a descendant of Capt. John Sherman, who had emigrated in about 1636 to MA from Dedham, Essex, England, where his father was a farmer, following his brother Edmund, who had emigrated two years earlier. A descendant of Edmund Sherman was the U.S. general William Tecumseh Sherman (1820–91), who led the Union march through GA. He was born in Lancaster, OH, the son of a judge; his middle name was bestowed in honor of a Shawnee chieftain.
NEWTON
NEWTON
Boy/Male
Hindu
One eyed, Lord Shiva
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Rayne in Essex or Raines in Derbyshire.English : habitational name from Rennes in Normandy.
Surname or Lastname
English (East Anglia)
English (East Anglia) : nickname meaning ‘diver’, from an agent derivative of Middle English douke(n) ‘to dive’ (a word that is probably related to duck (the bird)).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : unexplained.North German (Dücker) and Dutch : from the term for a duck or diving bird (from du(c)ken ‘to dive or duck’), probably applied as a nickname for someone thought to resemble the duck, but perhaps in some cases a metonymic occupational name for fowler or for a furrier who used the pelts of diving birds in his trade.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Benevolence. Beneficence. Charity.
Boy/Male
English
From Wade's estate.
Girl/Female
Indian
Chanting
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
King
Girl/Female
Indian
Lovely smell, Beautiful face
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Supreme Support
Girl/Female
Tamil
Darling, Dear, Little girl, Lovely eyed
NEWTON
NEWTON
NEWTON
NEWTON
NEWTON
n.
In the theory of gravitation, or of other forces acting in space, a function of the rectangular coordinates which determine the position of a point, such that its differential coefficients with respect to the coordinates are equal to the components of the force at the point considered; -- also called potential function, or force function. It is called also Newtonian potential when the force is directed to a fixed center and is inversely as the square of the distance from the center.
n.
A follower of Newton.
n.
One who illustrates any subject, or enlightens mankind; as, Newton was a distinguished luminary.
a.
Of or pertaining to Sir Isaac Newton, or his discoveries.
n.
A method of analysis developed by Newton, and based on the conception of all magnitudes as generated by motion, and involving in their changes the notion of velocity or rate of change. Its results are the same as those of the differential and integral calculus, from which it differs little except in notation and logical method.
n. pl.
First principles; fundamental beginnings; elements; as. Newton's Principia.