Shipley
English
Etymology
From Old English scēap (“sheep”) + lēah (“meadow, field, pasture”), thus a field for grazing sheep; equivalent to sheep + -ley.[1] Compare Gateley (literally “goat lea”).
Pronunciation
- enPR: shĭpʹlē, IPA(key): /ˈʃɪpli/
Proper noun
Shipley
- A number of places in England:
- A village and civil parish in Amber Valley district, Derbyshire (OS grid ref SK4444). [2]
- A hamlet in Eglingham parish, Northumberland (OS grid ref NU1416).
- A hamlet in Claverley parish, south-east Shropshire (OS grid ref SO8095). [3]
- A village and civil parish in Horsham district, West Sussex (OS grid ref TQ1421). [4]
- A town and civil parish with a town council in the Metropolitan Borough of Bradford, West Yorkshire, England. [5]
- An unincorporated community in Yamhill County, Oregon, United States.
- A hamlet near Blackheath, City of Blue Mountains, New South Wales, Australia.
- A habitational surname from Old English
References
- ^ Victor Watts, John Insley, Margaret Gelling, editors (2004), “SHIPLEY”, in The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN.
- ^ Parish map (Derbyshire)
- ^ OS: Shropshire
- ^ Parish map (West Sussex)
- ^ Parish map (West Yorkshire)