Andrewartha

Andrewartha and Trewartha are Cornish family names.

Etymology

Cornish Names[1] says:

  • Nouns:
    • "tre" a "town", feminine, maybe a hamlet or house
    • "tref: village, town", Brythonic Celt Welsh about 4-500 AD
  • Adjectives:
    • "Wartha": "upper" (maybe higher or greater or on a hill)
      • cf. "Wollas": "lower" (maybe smaller or lesser or in a valley, of the two).
  • Definite article:
    • "An" used as: "of the", "in the", "on the", "at the", in place names. Brythonic Celt Cornish language (Dexter, p. 18).

The book mentions "Trewartha" (p. 25), and "Andrewartha" (p. 60).

The Handbook of Cornish Names[2] states: "Trewartha" is a Cornish name meaning "Upper Farm" or "Upper Homestead".

People

gollark: Yeeeees.
gollark: You are not solving f(x)=4, you just want to know what happens if x is 4 inside the function.
gollark: ... no.
gollark: * the value of x
gollark: You substitute x into the right hand side.

References

  1. T. F. G. Dexter, Cornish Names, Royal Institution of Cornwall, 1926, Longmans Green. Reprinted 1968, Bradford Barton, p. 15
  2. G. Pawley White, A Handbook of Cornish Names, 1981.
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