seizer

  • 51Landers — Recorded in the spellings of Launder, Lander, Landor, Lavender, Larnder, and the patronymic Landers, this is an English surname. It is occupational and job descriptive for an official who superintended the laundry usually to a royal or noble… …

    Surnames reference

  • 52Launder — Recorded in the spellings of Launder, Lander, Landor, Lavender, Larnder, and the patronymic Landers, this is an English surname. It is occupational and job descriptive for an official who superintended the laundry usually to a royal or noble… …

    Surnames reference

  • 53Lardiner — This interesting name is a medieval job description for an official who superintended the supply of Pork to a Lords House or Castle, The Steward of the Larder , The history of the City of York written in 1785 but referring to a period Circa 1300… …

    Surnames reference

  • 54Lardnar — This interesting name is a medieval job description for an official who superintended the supply of Pork to a Lords House or Castle, The Steward of the Larder , The history of the City of York written in 1785 but referring to a period Circa 1300… …

    Surnames reference

  • 55Lerner — This interesting name is a medieval job description for an official who superintended the supply of Pork to a Lords House or Castle, The Steward of the Larder , The history of the City of York written in 1785 but referring to a period Circa 1300… …

    Surnames reference

  • 56Lurner — This interesting name is a medieval job description for an official who superintended the supply of Pork to a Lords House or Castle, The Steward of the Larder , The history of the City of York written in 1785 but referring to a period Circa 1300… …

    Surnames reference

  • 57Lardner — This interesting surname is English. It is occupational and a medieval job description for an official who superintended the supply of meat to royalty or nobility. In a book called The history of the City of York written in 1785, but referring to …

    Surnames reference

  • 58grípend — m ( es/ ) seizer, robber …

    Old to modern English dictionary

  • 59harpy — har|py [ˈha:pi US ˈha:rpi] n plural harpies [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: Harpy name of a creature in ancient Greek stories with the head of a woman and the body of a bird (16 21 centuries), from Greek harpyia seizer ] 1.) literary a cruel woman 2.)… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 60Caesar — c.1200, see CAESARIAN (Cf. caesarian); O.E. had casere, which would have yielded modern *coser, but it was replaced in Middle English by keiser, from Norse or Low German, and later in Middle English by the French or Latin form of the name. Cæsar… …

    Etymology dictionary