English: topographic name or metonymic occupational name for someone who lived by or worked at a barn or barns, from Middle English barn 'barn', 'granary'. In some cases, it may be a habitational name from Barnes (on the Surrey bank of the Thames in London), which was named in Old English with this word.
Barnum Name Meaning. English: habitational name from any of various places called Barnham, for example in Norfolk, Suffolk, and West Sussex. They are probably all named with the Old English byname Beorn(a) (see Barnes 2) or Old English beorn 'warrior' + ham 'homestead'.
The following is a list of people with the name Baron. In Hebrew, the fairly common Israeli surname "Bar-On" (usually contracted to Baron) means "son of strength/vigor/potency"; in many languages, "Baron" refers to the title of nobility.
The name Barric is a boy's name of English origin meaning "grain farm".
Barron Name Meaning. status name from Middle English barron (see Baron). A baron in Scotland was a member of a class of minor landowners who had a certain degree of jurisdiction over the local populace living in his barony. of Norman origin: from an Old French personal name Baro (oblique case Baron) (see Baron).
Barth Name Meaning. nickname for a bearded man, from Middle High German bart 'beard'. See also Beard 1. variant of Bart 2. habitational name from a place so named in Pomerania.
Bartholomew (originally /ˈbÉ‘ËrtÉ™lmi/, BAR-tÉ™l-mi; now commonly /ˈbÉ‘ËrˈθɒlÉ™mjuË/, bar-THO-lÉ™-mew) is an English given name that derives from the Aramaic name meaning "son of Talmai". Bar is Aramaic for "son", and marks patronyms. Talmai either comes from telem "furrow" or is a Hebrew version of Ptolemy or Filius.
Bartlett Name Meaning. English: from the Middle English personal name Bartlet, a pet form of Bartholomew.
Scottish Meaning: The name Bartley is a Scottish baby name. In Scottish the meaning of the name Bartley is: The birch tree meadow. See also Berkley.
English: habitational name from any of the numerous places named with Old English bere or bær 'barley' + tun 'enclosure', 'settlement', i.e. an outlying grange. Compare Barwick. German and central European (e.g. Czech and Slovak Barton): from a pet form of the personal name Bartolomaeus (see Bartholomew).