Pitcher (surname)

Last updated

Pitcher is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Related Research Articles

Travers is an English and Irish surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Nicholls is a surname of English origin. It is one of the patronymics derived from the given name Nicholas. The first record of the spelling is in 1322, in Staffordshire, England.

Pearse is a surname. Notable people with the name include:

Rob(ert), Bob, or Bobby Jones may refer to:

William Adams may refer to:

Masters is a surname. It may refer to:

Davenport is a surname and may refer to:

Millar is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Brandon is a surname. Notable persons with that surname include:

Adams is a common surname of English and Scottish origin, derived from the given name Adam. Related surnames include Addams and McAdam/MacAdam.

Hutchinson is a northern English patronymic from the medieval personal name Hutchin, a pet form of Hugh, it may refer to:

Sharpe is a surname. Notable people with the name include:

Buchanan is a surname of Scottish origin. People with this surname include:

Jefferson is a surname of English origin. Deriving from Middle English 'Geffreyson' in the Medieval ages. Notable people with the name include:

Farmer is an English surname. Although an occupationally derived surname, it was not given to tillers of the soil, but to collectors of taxes and tithes specializing in the collection of funds from agricultural leases. In 2000, there were 68,309 people with the last name Farmer in the United States, making it the 431st most common last name in the nation.

Appleton is an Anglo-Saxon locational surname.

Abraham is a surname. It can be of Jewish, English, French, German, Dutch, Irish, Welsh, Cornish, Breton, Lebanese, Syrian and other origins. It is derived from the Hebrew personal name Avraham, borne by the biblical patriarch Abraham, revered by Jews as a founding father of the Jewish people, and by Muslims as founder of all Semitic peoples. The name is explained in Genesis 17:5 as being derived from the Hebrew av hamon goyim "father of a multitude of nations". It was commonly used as a given name among Christians in the Middle Ages, and has always been a popular Jewish given name. The English name Abram is often a short form of Abraham, but it can also be a shortened version of Adburgham, which comes from a place name. As an Irish name, it was adopted as an approximation of the Gaelic name Mac an Bhreitheamhan "son of the judge". The German name Brahm is often a short form of Abraham, but it can also be a topographic name signifying someone who lived near a bramble thicket. The name Braham has been used as an Anglicization of both Abraham and its patronymic Abrahams by Ashkenazi Jews in the British Isles. Abraham has also been used as an Anglicization of the equivalent Arabic surname Ibrāhīm.

Ingram or Ingrams is a surname, from the given name Ingram. Notable people with the surname include:

Skinner is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Hayward is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: