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Natural amphitheatre in England
Cheesefoot Head (/ˈtʃɛsfʊt/ CHESS-fuut) is a large natural amphitheatre (also known as Matterley Bowl) and beauty spot just outside Winchester, England
Cheesefoot_Head
Road in southern England
of Hinton Ampner and rises high on to the Hampshire downs, passing Cheesefoot Head, before descending to merge with the A31 at Chilcomb to the east of
A272_road
Protected area in England (1962–2010)
and Old Winchester Hill near Corhampton and St Catherine's Hill and Cheesefoot Head near Winchester. There was controversy in 1994 when a new stretch of
East_Hampshire_AONB
Hill in United Kingdom
who lived in the early–mid-20th century, wrote "I'll plant myself on Cheesefoot Head/and miles of Hampshire will I tread,/I'll turn my nose to Farley Mount/No
Farley_Mount
British electrical engineer and crop circle researcher (born 1946)
complex formation resembling a Celtic Cross in a wheat field near Cheesefoot Head, Hampshire. This observation marked the start of his investigation
Colin_Andrews
Immersive music festival near Winchester, England
is split into a few main areas: the Downtown area contained within Cheesefoot Head; the Temple Valley valley which splits the site diagonally; and the
Boomtown_(festival)
Long-distance footpath in the south of England
through. The undulating path begins in Winchester Hampshire, and passes Cheesefoot Head, the towns of Petersfield and Arundel, the villages of Storrington
South_Downs_Way
nightclub in London and Sydney. The English festivals were held at Cheesefoot Head near Winchester, Hampshire, and was one of the most popular British
Homelands_(festival)
Hill in England
said never to dry up. Views are extensive from Tan Hill, ranging from Cheesefoot Head near Winchester to the southeast to, in clear weather, the Black Mountains
Tan_Hill,_Wiltshire
slopes including Magdalen (Morn) Hill to the north, Chilcomb Down, Cheesefoot Head and Telegraph Hill to the east, Deacon Hill, Twyford Down and St. Catherine's
Winchester–East Meon Anticline
Winchester–East_Meon_Anticline
Bus company in Southampton, England
It passes notable attractions such as Winchester Science Centre, Cheesefoot Head, Hinton Ampner House, Old Winchester Hill and Langrish House. The service
Bluestar_(bus_company)
List of protected wildlife and geological sites in Hampshire
"Designated Sites View: Cheesefoot Head". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Retrieved 17 April 2020. "Cheesefoot Head citation" (PDF). Sites
List of Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Hampshire
List_of_Sites_of_Special_Scientific_Interest_in_Hampshire
Nature reserve in Hampshire, England
Wood Castle Bottom to Yateley and Hawley Commons Catherington Down Cheesefoot Head Chichester Harbour Chilbolton Common Coombe Wood and The Lythe Coulters
Ashford_Hill_NNR
Compton Down, Oliver's Battery, Magdalen (Morn) Hill, Chilcomb Down, Cheesefoot Head, Telegraph Hill, Deacon Hill, Twyford Down, St Catherine's Hill, Beacon
Geology_of_Hampshire
2009 season of American television series
Faisal Marshall Allman as Bezzy Noah Bean as Art Sloan Cody Kasch as Cheesefoot The fifth season received positive reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes, it has
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia season 5
It's_Always_Sunny_in_Philadelphia_season_5
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
Surname or Lastname
Scottish
Scottish : habitational name from a place so called near Kelso on the border with England. Early forms include Hadden, Hauden, and Halden; the place name is probably from Old English halh ‘nook’, ‘recess’ + denu ‘valley’.English : habitational name from a place in East Yorkshire, so named from Old Norse hǫfuð ‘head’ (replacing Old English hēafod) + Old English denu ‘valley’; the first element may have been used in the sense ‘principal’, ‘top’, or ‘end’.Americanized form of Norwegian Hovden.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : habitational name from places in County Durham and Northumberland, so named from Old English hǣð ‘heathland’, ‘heather’ + lēah ‘wood’, ‘clearing’.English and Scottish : variant spelling of Headley.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : status name from Middle English hefdman ‘chief’, ‘headman’, ‘leader’ (Old English hēfodman).
Surname or Lastname
North German
North German : variant of the habitational name Lewing, from a place near Stade in Lower Saxony.North German : patronymic from a personal name (Lehwing or Lewien), formed with Middle Low German lev ‘dear’ + win ‘friend’.English : perhaps a habitational name from Levens in Cumbria, probably so named from the Old English personal name LÄ“ofa (+ genitive n) + næss ‘promontory’, ‘headland’.Possibly a hypercorrected spelling of Irish Levens, a County Louth name, which Woulfe interprets as an Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac DhuinnshlébhÃn, a variant of Dunleavy.
Surname or Lastname
Dutch and North German
Dutch and North German : variant of Hoff.North German : topographic name from a variant of Hoff.Dutch : nickname from hoofd ‘head’. Compare English Head 1.English : variant spelling of Huff.
Surname or Lastname
Altered spelling of German Homann.English
Altered spelling of German Homann.English : variant of Holman. This surname has been in Ireland since the 17th century.Dutch : status name from Middle Dutch hovetman, hooftman ‘head man’, ‘leader’, ‘adviser’.Dutch : variant of Hoffman 2.Slovenian : unexplained.
Surname or Lastname
Northern English
Northern English : probably a habitational name from a minor place in Soulby, Cumbria, called Longthorn, from Old English lang ‘long’ + horn ‘projecting headland’, or a topographic name with the same meaning.English : nickname from Middle English lang, long ‘long’ + horn ‘horn’, with various possible applications; it could have denoted a horn blower or possibly a cuckhold, or it may have referred to some physical characteristic; there is some suggestion that horn in some names may mean ‘head’ or otherwise ‘phallus’.Danish : habitational name from Langhorn.Dutch : nickname for someone with long ears.
Surname or Lastname
Irish
Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Mongáin ‘descendant of Mongán’, originally a byname for someone with a luxuriant head of hair (from mong ‘hair’, ‘mane’), borne by families from Connacht, County Limerick, and Tyrone. It is also a Huguenot name, traced back to immigrants from Metz.Irish : see Manning.English (of Norman origin) : nickname for a glutton, from Old French manger ‘to eat’.English : occupational name from old Spanish mangón ‘small trader’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : regional name from the coastal district of eastern Yorkshire (now Humberside), the origin of which is probably Old Norse hǫldr, within the Danelaw (the region of pre-conquest England where Danish rule and custom was dominant) a rank of feudal nobility immediately below that of earl, + nes ‘nose’, ‘headland’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Headington in Oxfordshire, named with the genitive of an unrecorded Old English personal name, Hedena, + dūn ‘hill’.
Surname or Lastname
English (northern)
English (northern) : habitational name from a lost place in County Durham called Hollingside or Holmside, from Old English hole(g)n ‘holly’ + sīde ‘hillside’, ‘slope’; there is a Hollingside Lane on the southern outskirts of Durham city. In some cases it may be from Hollinhead in Lancashire, so named from Old English holegn ‘holly’ + hēafod ‘headland’, ‘ridge’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived by a headland, Middle English hevedland.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : possibly an unflattering nickname for a boastful, swaggering person (one who huffs and puffs).German (Hüffer) : from the Germanic personal name Hugifrid, composed of hug ‘head’, ‘mind’, ‘spirit’ + frid ‘peace’.North German (Hüffer) : status name for a prosperous small farmer. Compare South German Huber.German : probably an American spelling of Hof or Hoff.
Surname or Lastname
English (chiefly Kent)
English (chiefly Kent) : from Middle English heved ‘head’, applied as a nickname for someone with some peculiarity or disproportion of the head, or a topographic name for someone who lived on a hill or at the head of a stream or valley. This surname has long been established in Ireland.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a peasant farmer, from Middle English husband ‘tiller of the soil’, ‘husbandman’. The term (late Old English hūsbonda, Old Norse húsbóndi), a compound of hús ‘house’ + bóndi (see Bond) originally described a man who was head of his own household, and this may have been the sense in some of the earliest examples of the surname.
Surname or Lastname
Variant spelling of Norwegian Høgset(h) (see Hogsett).English
Variant spelling of Norwegian Høgset(h) (see Hogsett).English : Reaney and Wilson record a 17th-century example of this name in Devon. Evidently an uncomplimentary nickname meaning ‘hog’s head’, it is no longer found in the British Isles.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English lady ‘lady’, ‘female head of a household’, hence a nickname for a woman who was ladylike or the head of a household or for an effeminate man.Polish : variant of Lada.Hungarian (Ládi) : habitational name for someone from Lád in Borsod county or Lad in Somogy county.
Surname or Lastname
English and Dutch
English and Dutch : occupational name for a washerman or launderer, Old French, Middle Dutch lavendier (Late Latin lavandarius, an agent derivative of lavanda ‘washing’, ‘things to be washed’). The term was applied especially to a worker in the wool industry who washed the raw wool or rinsed the cloth after fulling. There is no evidence for any direct connection with the word for the plant (Middle English, Old French lavendre). However, the etymology of the plant name is obscure; it may have been named in ancient times with reference to the use of lavender oil for cleaning or of the dried heads of lavender in perfuming freshly washed clothes.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the female personal name Kynborough, recorded in Suffolk, England, as late as the 16th and 17th centuries. Although there is no Middle English evidence for it, this probably represents a survival of Old English female personal name Cyneburh, composed of the elements cyne- ‘royal’ + burh ‘fortress’, ‘stronghold’. This was the name of a daughter of the 7th-century King Penda of Mercia, who, in spite of her father’s staunch opposition to Christianity, was converted and founded an abbey, serving as its head. She was venerated as a saint, and gave her name to the village of Kimberley in Norfolk. The surname is now almost extinct in England, but continues to flourish in the U.S.
Male
English
Variant spelling of English Hedley, HEADLEY means "heather field."
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
The One No One can Win
Boy/Male
American, Australian, Chinese, Dutch, German, Greek, Latin
From Sebaste; Revered
Girl/Female
Indian
Elephant
Girl/Female
Indian
Worship
Boy/Male
Muslim
Slave of the all-seeing
Boy/Male
Hebrew
Answer of God; God answers.
Boy/Male
Hindu
God of law, One well versed in law, Follower of the correct way, Master of the right path
Boy/Male
Indian, Kannada, Tamil
Master of Music; Maestro
Boy/Male
Muslim
Sky
Boy/Male
Tamil
A bower
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
CHEESEFOOT HEAD
n.
The Guinea-hen flower; -- so called in England because its spotted petals resemble the scales of a snake's head.
a.
Double-headed.
a.
Having three heads; three-headed; as, the triple-headed dog Cerberus.
n.
The part of a lathe that holds the revolving spindle and its attachments; -- also called poppet head, the opposite corresponding part being called a tailstock.
n.
A violent, passionate person; a hasty or impetuous person; as, the rant of a hot-head.
a.
Having a head armed with thorns or spines.
a.
Having shaggy hair; shock-headed.
n.
An executioner who cuts off heads.
a.
Having a head like a pig; hence, figuratively: stupidity obstinate; perverse; stubborn.
n.
A headdress.
a.
Having a head like that of a nail; formed so as to resemble the head of a nail.
a.
Having a top, or head, shaped like the top of a covered wagon, or resembling in section or outline an inverted U, thus /; as, a wagonheaded ceiling.
n.
That part of a bridle or halter which encompasses the head.
a.
Disordered in the head; dizzy; delirious.
n.
The manner of dressing the head, as at a particular time and place.
a.
Having the head full of confused notions.
a.
Shock-headed.
a.
Apt to affect the head; intoxicating; strong.
n.
The stone at the head of a grave.
a.
Having a thick and bushy head of hair.