Ashley

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English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old English *Æsċlēah, composed of æsċ (ash tree) + lēah (wood, clearing). Equivalent to Ash +‎ -ley.

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /ˈæʃli/
  • Audio:(file)

Proper noun

Ashley (countable and uncountable, plural Ashleys)

  1. A number of villages and hamlets in England:
    1. A village in Cambridgeshire.
    2. A village and civil parish in Cheshire East, Cheshire (OS grid ref SJ7784).
    3. A settlement in St Leonards and St Ives parish, east Dorset (OS grid ref SU1304).
    4. A village in Gloucestershire.
    5. A hamlet in East Hampshire district, Hampshire.
    6. A village in New Forest district, Hampshire.
    7. A village in Test Valley district, Hampshire.
    8. A hamlet in Kent.
    9. A village and civil parish in North Northamptonshire, Northamptonshire, previously in Kettering district (OS grid ref SP7990).
    10. A village in Staffordshire.
    11. A village in Wiltshire.
  2. A surname from Old English derived from the places in England.
  3. A male given name transferred from the surname.
    • 1936 June 30, Margaret Mitchell, chapter III, in Gone with the Wind, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, →OCLC; republished New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, 1944, →OCLC:
      'There now, Scarlett! You admit it is true. What would you be doing with a husband like Ashley? 'Tis moonstruck they all are, all the Wilkes.'
  4. A female given name transferred from the surname.
    Synonym: Ash
    • 1999, Andrew Pyper, chapter 10, in Lost Girls:
      But when Krystal McConnell and Ashley Flynn were named deep in the heart of the '80s the thing was cuteness, feminine delicacy raised to an aesthetic paradigm. --- And everyone named according to a particular version of the pedigree fantasy. Ashley : transplanted Southern privilege, a destiny lying in sorority mixers and a marriage of health club memberships, state-of-the-art appliances and night courses in nouvelle cuisine.
    • 2013, Matt Haig, The Humans, Canongate, →ISBN, page 832:
      I discovered that her full name was Margaret Lowell. I wasn't an expert on Earth names, but I still knew this was wildly inappropriate. She should have been called Lana Bellcurve or Ashley Brainsex or something.
  5. A number of places in the United States of America:
    1. A city in Illinois; named for railroad official Col. L. W. Ashley.
    2. A city, the county seat of McIntosh County, North Dakota; named for railroad official Ashley E. Morrow.
    3. A town in Indiana.
    4. A borough of Pennsylvania.
    5. A village in Michigan.
    6. A village in Ohio; named for Col. L. W. Ashley.
    7. A census-designated place in Missouri; named for the state's first lieutenant governor, William Henry Ashley.
    8. An unincorporated community in West Virginia; named for the local Ash family.
    9. An unincorporated community in Wisconsin.
  6. A locality in New South Wales, Australia; named for one of the settlements in England.

Usage notes

  • Ashley was originally a male given name, but since the sixties it has also been given to women, particularly in the US, where it was the top name for girls in 1991 and 1992.

Derived terms

Translations

Anagrams

Tagalog

Etymology

Borrowed from English Ashley.

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Ashley (Baybayin spelling ᜀᜐ᜔ᜎᜒ)

  1. a female given name from English, of 2000s and later Philippines usage