- Crad
Card Name Meaning. English: metonymic occupational name for someone who carded wool (i.e. disentangled it), preparatory to spinning, from Middle English, Old French card(e) 'carder', an implement used for this purpose. Reduced form of Irish McCard.
Meaning:
- Cradawg
Meaning: Mythical son of Bran.
Origin: Celtic - Craddock
The origins of the ancient name Craddock belong to that rich Celtic tradition that comes from Wales. This surname was derived from the Welsh personal name Caradoc, meaning "amiable."
Meaning: Affection, beloved
Origin: English - Cradoe
Origin and meaning. Manning is from an old Norse word — manningi — meaning a brave or valiant man; and one of the first forms of the name was Mannin; another cartography was Mannygn. One historian gives a Saxon origin for the family, which he calls "ancient and noble".
- Craeg
Craig is an English-language masculine given name of an ultimately Celtic derivation. The name has two origins. In some cases it can originate from a nickname, derived from the Scottish Gaelic word creag, meaning "rock," similar to Peter.
- Craege
Craig is an English-language masculine given name of an ultimately Celtic derivation. The name has two origins. In some cases it can originate from a nickname, derived from the Scottish Gaelic word creag, meaning "rock," similar to Peter.
- Crag
Craig is an English-language masculine given name of an ultimately Celtic derivation. The name has two origins. In some cases it can originate from a nickname, derived from the Scottish Gaelic word creag, meaning "rock," similar to Peter. ... The English word "crag" also shares an origin with these Celtic words.
- Crai
Craig is a Scottish, Irish & Welsh masculine given name, all variations derive from the same Celtic branch. ... In some cases it can originate from a nickname, derived from the Scottish Gaelic word creag, meaning "rock," similar to Peter.
- Craig - KRAYG
Craig is an English-language masculine given name of an ultimately Celtic derivation. The name has two origins. In some cases it can originate from a nickname, derived from the Scottish Gaelic word creag, meaning "rock," similar to Peter. ... The English word "crag" also shares an origin with these Celtic words.
- Craigg
Craig is an English-language masculine given name of an ultimately Celtic derivation. The name has two origins. In some cases it can originate from a nickname, derived from the Scottish Gaelic word creag, meaning "rock," similar to Peter.
- Craigie
Craigie Name Meaning. Scottish: topographic name from the locative case of Gaelic creagach 'rocky place' (see Craigo).
- Cramer
Cramer /ˈkreɪmər/ is a surname. A British surname, with variant spellings such as Cranmere, Cranmer, Crammer. It can also be an Anglicized version of the German surname Krämer (pronounced [ˈkʁɛːmɐ]) which is an old term for the profession of traveling merchants in the Late Middle Ages.
- Crandal
Meaning: Derived from crandall, crane valley
Origin: English - Crandall - KRAN-dəl
Crandall Name Meaning. Scottish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Raonuill 'son of Raonull' (see Ronald).
Meaning: Crane's valley
Origin: American - Crandell
Crandell. Buy JPG Image » Many variations of the name Crandell have evolved since the time of its initial creation. In Gaelic it appeared as Mac Raghnaill, which means son of Raghnal. Raghnal is a personal name equivalent to Randal or Reginald.
Meaning: From the crane valley
Origin: English - Crane
Crane Family History. Crane Name Meaning. English: nickname, most likely for a tall, thin man with long legs, from Middle English cran 'crane' (the bird), Old English cran, cron. The term included the heron until the introduction of a separate word for the latter in the 14th century. Dutch: variant spelling of Krane.
Meaning: Crane
- Cranleah
Etymology. Until the mid-1860s, the village was usually spelt Cranley. ... Etymologists consider all these versions to be the fusion of the Old English words "Cran", meaning "crane", and "Lēoh" that together mean 'a woodland clearing visited by cranes'.
Meaning: From the crane meadow
Origin: English - Cranleigh
Cranleigh appears in the book The Meaning of Liff by Douglas Adams and John Lloyd, in which experiences which do not have words yet are given words which currently only exist as names of places. "Cranleigh" is defined as: "A mood of irrational irritation with everyone and everything."
Meaning: Derived from cranley, crane meadow
Origin: English - Cranley
Meaning: From the crane meadow
Origin: English - Cranly
Etymology. Until the mid-1860s, the village was usually spelt Cranley. ... Etymologists consider all these versions to be the fusion of the Old English words "Cran", meaning "crane", and "Lēoh" that together mean 'a woodland clearing visited by cranes'.
Meaning: From the crane meadow
Origin: English - Crannog
Crannog in British. (ˈkrænəɡ ) or crannoge (ˈkrænədʒ ) an ancient Celtic lake or bog dwelling dating from the late Bronze Age to the 16th century ad, often fortified and used as a refuge. Word origin of 'crannog' C19: from Irish Gaelic crannóg, from Old Irish crann tree.
- Cranog
Etymology and uncertain meanings. The Irish word crannóg derives from Old Irish crannóc, which referred to a wooden structure or vessel, stemming from crann, which means "tree", plus a diminutive ending—literally "young tree".
Meaning: A heron
Origin: Irish - Cranston
Cranston Name Meaning. Scottish: habitational name from a place near Dalkeith named Cranston, from the genitive case of the Old English byname Cran meaning 'crane' + Old English tun 'settlement'.
- Cranstun
Meaning: From the crane estate
Origin: English - Crash
Word Origin for crash. ... Computing sense is 1973, which makes it one of the earliest computer jargon words. Meaning "break into a party, etc." is 1922. Slang meaning "to sleep" dates from 1943; especially from 1965.
Meaning:
- Crawford - KRAW-fərd
Crawford is a surname (and occasional given name) of English, Scottish and Northern Irish origin. In some cases it is a habitational name derived from several different places called Crawford (for example Crawford, South Lanarkshire, Scotland; Dorset, England; and Somerset, England).
- Cray - KRAY
Cray Family History. Cray Name Meaning. Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Craobhaigh 'descendant of Craobhach', a byname meaning 'curly(-headed)' or 'prolific' (from craobh 'branch', 'bough'). Compare Creevy. Respelling of German Kray or Krey.
Meaning: Prolific
Origin: Gaelic - Craye
- Crayg
Craig is an English-language masculine given name of an ultimately Celtic derivation. The name has two origins. In some cases it can originate from a nickname, derived from the Scottish Gaelic word creag, meaning "rock," similar to Peter. ... The English word "crag" also shares an origin with these Celtic words.
- Crayton
Crayton Name Meaning. English: habitational name, possibly a variant spelling of Creighton.
Meaning: