Want this question answered?
Hadley is an English (chiefly West Midlands) habitational name from either of two places named Hadley, in Worcestershire and Shropshire, or from either of two places named Hadleigh, in Essex and Suffolk. The first is named from the Old English personal name Hadda + leah 'wood', '(woodland) clearing'; the other three are from Old English 'heathland', 'heather' + leah.
Jamaica is the English meaning for the unscrambled name aaaimcJ.
English: habitational name from any of the many places so named, from Old English n?owe 'new' + t?n 'enclosure', 'settlement'. According to Ekwall, this is the commonest English place name. For this reason, the surname has a highly fragmented origin.
The English surname Bradley is a place name from many places throughout England named Bradley. The name is from the Old English words brad meaning 'broad' and leah which means 'woodland clearing'.
strontium is named after a village in Scotland
The official name of Jamaica is simply 'Jamaica'
The English surname Bradley is a place name from many places throughout England named Bradley. The name is from the Old English words brad meaning 'broad' and leah which means 'woodland clearing'.
Barnett is a name taken from various places called Barnet in London. These were named after the Old English bærnet meaning "place cleared by burning".
The surname Newby is an English place name from various places in northern England named with the Middle English newe 'new' + by 'farm', 'settlement' (of Old Norse origin).
Susie Maroney is the Australian that swam from Jamaica to Cuba.
"English (mainly Yorkshire): topographic name for someone who lived by a stream in a marsh or in a hollow, from Middle English syke 'marshy stream', 'damp gully', or a habitational name from one of the places named with this word, in Lancashire and West Yorkshire."-- www.ancestry.com
Worthington is an English habitational name from places in Lancashire and Leicestershire named Worthington; both may have originally been named in Old English as Wurðingtun 'settlement (Old English tun) associated with Wurð', but it is also possible that the first element was Old English worðign, a derivative of worð 'enclosure'. Source: Ancestry.com