Brook

See also: brook

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

  • As an English surname, from the noun brook.
  • As a north German surname, from Low German Brook (swamp, marsh), related to the above.
  • As a Dutch surname, Americanized from Broek, from broek, also related to the above.
  • As a Jewish and German surname, Americanized from Bruck, Bruch (from Bruch (wetland, marsh)).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bɹʊk/, enPR: brŏŏk
    • Audio (US):(file)
  • (Scotland, Northern Ireland) IPA(key): /bɹʉk/
  • Rhymes: -ʊk

Proper noun

Brook

  1. A habitational surname from Middle English for someone living by a brook.
  2. A surname from Hebrew, a transliteration and normalization of Hebrew ברך (barúkh, blessed).
  3. A male given name transferred from the surname, variant of Brooks.
  4. A female given name transferred from the surname, of modern usage, variant of Brooke.
  5. A town in Newton County, Indiana, United States.
  6. A number of places in England:
    1. A hamlet in Tedburn St Mary parish, Teignbridge district, Devon, divided into Higher and Lower Brook (OS grid ref SX8091). [1]
    2. A hamlet in Tavistock parish, West Devon district, Devon (OS grid ref SX4772).
    3. A hamlet in Bramshaw parish, New Forest district, Hampshire (OS grid ref SU2714).
    4. A hamlet in King's Somborne parish, Test Valley district, Hampshire (OS grid ref SU3428).
    5. A village in Brighstone parish, Isle of Wight (OS grid ref SZ3983).
    6. A village and civil parish in Ashford borough, Kent (OS grid ref TR0644). [2]
    7. A hamlet in Albury parish, Guildford borough, Surrey (OS grid ref TQ0646).
    8. A hamlet in Witley parish, Waverley borough, Surrey (OS grid ref SU9338).
  7. A hamlet in Llanddowror community, Carmarthenshire, Wales (OS grid ref SN2609).

References

Anagrams

German Low German

Etymology

From Middle Low German brôk, from Old Saxon *brōk, from Proto-West Germanic *brōk.

Noun

Brook m or n (plural Broken)

  1. A marsh; swamp