Langdon Name Meaning. English: habitational name from any of various places, for example in Devon, Dorset, Essex, Kent, and Warwickshire, so named from Old English lang, long 'long' + dun 'hill'.
Anglo-Saxon Meaning: The name Lange is an Anglo-Saxon baby name. In Anglo-Saxon the meaning of the name Lange is: Long.
Langer Name Meaning. German, Dutch, Danish, and Jewish (Ashkenazic): nickname for a tall man, from an inflected form of Lang. According to Gottschald, in the Franconian dialect of German this was also a term for an unskilled laborer (more fully, Handlanger).
English: habitational name from any of the numerous places named in Old English as 'long ford', from lang, long 'long' + ford 'ford', except for Langford in Nottinghamshire, which is named with an Old English personal name Landa or possibly land, here used in a specific sense such as 'boundary' or 'district', with the ...
Most, as for example those in Dorset, Norfolk, Rutland, and Suffolk, were named from Old English lang 'long' + ham 'homestead', 'enclosure'; but one in Essex is recorded in Domesday Book as Laingaham, from Old English Lahhingaham 'homestead of the people of Lahha', and one in Lincolnshire originally had as its second ...
Langi Family History. Langi Name Meaning. 3,949 Historical Documents with Langi on Ancestry 2,870 Birth, Marriage, and Deaths 479 Census and Voter Lists 56 Military Records 259 Immigration Records 285 Member Trees.
Langley Name Meaning. habitational name from any of the numerous places named with Old English lang 'long' + leah 'wood', 'glade'; or a topographic name with the same meaning. English: from the Old Norse female personal name LanglÃf, composed of the elements lang 'long' + lÃf 'life'.
Langleah is a baby boy name its meaning is . Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 766 times.
English Meaning: The name Langston is an English baby name. In English the meaning of the name Langston is: From the long enclosure 'long stone.
Langton Name Meaning. English: habitational name from any of numerous places so called from Old English lang 'long' + tun 'enclosure', 'settlement'. (Langton in County Durham, however, has the same etymology as Langdon).