Hare
English
Etymology
- As an Irish surname, from ó hír (“descendant of Ír”), a personal name related to Old Irish sír (“long-lasting”).
- Also as an Irish surname, from ó Haichir (“descendant of Aichear”), from aichear (“sharp”).
- As an English surname, from the noun hare, originally as a nickname.
- Also as an English surname, from Ayre.
- Also as an English surname, from the obsolete Old English hær (“stone”).
- Also as an English surname, variant of Hair.
- As a French surname, from the verb harer (“to stir up, excite”), from Old French harier, from Frankish *hariōn, from Proto-Germanic *harjōną (“to devastate, lay waste”).
- As a German surname, variant of Harr.
Proper noun
Hare
- A surname transferred from the nickname.
- Synonym of Sahtú.
- A hamlet in Broadway parish, Somerset, England, previously in South Somerset district (OS grid ref ST2915). [1]
- An unincorporated community in Williamson County, Texas, United States.
- A dialect of Slavey, an Athabaskan language.
- Synonym: Kawchottine
References
- ^ List of United Kingdom locations: Han-Har on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
Maori
Proper noun
Hare
- a male given name, Harry