LYN
WiktionaryText

Etymology


From place names in Norfolk and Scotland, or from corresponding / words.
  • The female name is used as a fanciful spelling variant of Lyn, shortened from the common -lyn/-line ending of women's names , as in Carolyn, Evelyn, Gwendolyn.

Proper noun



  1. Any of several place names ( outside Britain named for persons with the surname).
  2. usually appearing as a middle name.
  3. , popular as a middle name.

Quotations

  • 1595 William Shakespeare, King Henry VI, Part 3, Act IV, Scene V
    King Edward. But whither shall we then?
    Hastings. To Lynn, my lord; and ship from thence to Flanders.
  • 1989 Ann Richards,Peter Knobler, Straight from the Heart: My Life in Politics and Other Places, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 0671680730, page 91
    David's father's name was Leon, and those people who didn't call him Dick called him Lynn. And I loved my former professor Ralph Lynn, so I named my baby Lynn Cecile.
  • 2007 Susan Richards Shreve, Warm Springs: Traces of a Childhood at FDR's Polio Haven, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, ISBN 061865853X, page 67
    He called me Mary because I had told him my middle name was Mary and I was called by that name at home, although my middle name was Lynn. But neither Susan or Lynn seemed right for a Quaker girl converting to Catholicism.
 
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