Search references for MUMMIUS BUG. Phrases containing MUMMIUS BUG
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Genus of true bugs
belong to the genus Mummius: Mummius bicorniger Horváth, 1910 Mummius denigratus Drake, 1954 Mummius minor Duarte Rodrigues, 1977 "Mummius Report". Integrated
Mummius_(bug)
1897 Melanorhopala Stål, 1873 Metasalis Lee, 1971 Monosteira Costa, 1863 Mummius Horváth, 1910 Naitingis Drake and Ruhoff, 1962 Naochila Drake, 1957 Neoplerochila
List_of_Tingini_genera
MUMMIUS BUG
MUMMIUS BUG
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English besant, the name of a gold coin (via Old French from Latin (nummus) byzantius, so called because it was first minted at Byzantium). The surname arose as a metonymic occupational name for a minter or moneyer or else as a nickname for a man who was considered to be rich or miserly.
Female
Babylonian
, the mother of gods.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English boggish ‘boastful’, ‘haughty’ (a word of unknown origin, perhaps akin to Germanic bag and bug, with the literal meaning ‘swollen’, ‘puffed up’). The name (in the forms Boge(y)s, Boga(y)s) is found in the 12th century in Yorkshire and East Anglia, and also around Bordeaux, which had trading links with East Anglia.
Surname or Lastname
English (East Anglia)
English (East Anglia) : nickname from Middle English wigge ‘beetle’, ‘bug’.English (East Anglia) : metonymic occupational name for a maker of fancy breads baked in rounds and then divided up into wedge-shaped slices, Middle English wigge, from Middle Dutch wigge ‘wedge(-shaped cake)’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for an uncouth or weird man, from Middle English bugge ‘hobgoblin’, ‘scarecrow’ (perhaps from Welsh bwg ‘ghost’). Compare Bogle 1.
Surname or Lastname
Scandinavian
Scandinavian : habitational name from a place so named in Denmark.Scandinavian : from the old Danish personal names Buggi or Bukki, short forms of various German compound names.English : variant spelling of Bugg.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Bugg.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of several places called Bowden or Bowdon. Bowden in Devon and Derbyshire and Bowdon in Cheshire are named with Old English boga ‘bow’ + dūn ‘hill’, i.e. ‘hill shaped like a bow’; one in Leicestershire (Bugedone in Domesday Book) comes, according to Ekwall, from the Old English personal name Būga (masculine) or Bucge (feminine) + dūn. There are also Scottish places of this name, but there are comparatively few bearers of the surname Bowden north of the border.English : habitational name from Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, so named with the Old English phrase būfan dūne ‘on, upon the hill’. The surname may also have arisen as a topographic name from the same phrase used independently, for someone who lived at the top of a hill.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Buadáin ‘descendant of Buadán’, an Old Irish personal name.
Boy/Male
Arabic
Bug
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Loomis.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name, common in Lancashire and Yorkshire, from Buglawton or Church Lawton in Cheshire, or Lawton in Herefordshire, named in Old English as ‘settlement on or near a hill’, or ‘settlement by a burial mound’, from hlÄw ‘hill’, ‘burial mound’ + tÅ«n ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’.English : variant spelling of Laughton.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Bugby, a Northamptonshire variant of Buckby (see Buckbee).
Boy/Male
Shakespearean
The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus' Son to Titus Andronicus.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Loomis.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Devon and Cornwall)
English (mainly Devon and Cornwall) : nickname from Norman French buge ‘mouth’ (Late Latin bucca), applied either to someone with a large or misshapen mouth or to someone who made excessive use of his mouth, i.e. a garrulous, indiscreet, or gluttonous person. The word is also recorded in Middle English in the sense ‘victuals supplied for retainers on a military campaign’, and the surname may therefore also have arisen as a metonymic occupational name for a medieval quartermaster.Scottish (Caithness and Orkney) : unexplained.
Male
Egyptian
, the Mummied Hawk.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : of uncertain derivation. Reaney suggests it may be from Middle English bugee, buggye ‘lambskin’, and hence probably a metonymic occupational name for someone who prepared such skins.
Girl/Female
British, English
Cute
Surname or Lastname
Catalan
Catalan : nickname for a bald man, equivalent to Spanish Cabello.English : variant spelling of Cable.Possibly a respelling of German Göbel (see Goebel) or Kabel.William Cabell, of Bugley near Warminster, in Wiltshire, England, trained in surgery and migrated to Virginia in the 18th century. The emigrant ancestor of a distinguished VA family, he married in 1726 and by 1741 had carried settlements 50 miles westward. As a pioneer during VA’s westward push, the surgeon had a private hospital from which he handed out medicines and wooden legs crafted by his artisans.
Surname or Lastname
English (Bedfordshire)
English (Bedfordshire) : nickname for someone disfigured by a lump or hump, from a diminutive of Old French bugne ‘swelling’, ‘protuberance’. The term bugnon was also applied to a kind of puffed-up fruit tart, and so the surname may also have been a metonymic occupational name for a baker of these.
MUMMIUS BUG
MUMMIUS BUG
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian
Lord Shiva
Girl/Female
Hindu
Name of the sage
Boy/Male
Muslim
Ambassador, Handsome, Emissary, Mediator
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a lost place in Essex (probably near Pebmarsh) recorded in Domesday Book as Liffildeuuella ‘spring or stream (Old English wella) of a woman named Lēofhild’.
Boy/Male
Indian, Telugu
One with Noble Thoughts
Female
Hindi/Indian
(শবনম) Hindi name derived from a Persian word SHABNAM means "dew drops on flowers."
Girl/Female
English, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Sikh, Tamil, Telugu
Lovely; Happiness
Male
Egyptian
, an Egyptian monarch, of the XIth dynasty.
Biblical
that troubles or oppresses; anguish
Boy/Male
Tamil
God knowledge
MUMMIUS BUG
MUMMIUS BUG
MUMMIUS BUG
MUMMIUS BUG
MUMMIUS BUG
pl.
of Dummy
n.
A genus of hydroids having large, naked, flowerlike hydranths at the summits of long, slender, usually simple, stems. The gonophores are small, and form clusters at the bases of the outer tentacles.
v. t.
To embalm; to mummify.
pl.
of Mammy
a.
Inhabiting the somewhat high slopes and summits of mountains, but considerably below the snow line.
a.
Willfully disobedient to the summous or prders of a court.
v. t.
To cause to become antiquated, rigid, or fixed, as by fossilization; to mummify; to deaden.
a.
Of or pertaining to a gumma.
pl.
of Rummy
n.
A solid having five summits or angular points.
n.
One who mumms, or makes diversion in disguise; a masker; a buffon.
v. t.
To embalm and dry as a mummy; to make into, or like, a mummy.
imp. & p. p.
of Mummify
n.
A solid having many summits or angular points; a polyhedron.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Mummify
pl.
of Mummy
a.
Gumlike, or composed of gum; gummy.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Mumm
imp. & p. p.
of Mummy