Hardaker English (Yorks.): topographic name for someone
who lived on a patch of poor, stony land, from ME hard
hard, difficult + aker cultivated land (see ACKER),
or habitation name from a minor place in Clapham, W Yorks.,
called Hardacre, which has this etymology.
Hardcastle English (Yorks.): habitation name from
Hardcastle Crags in W Yorks., near Hebden Bridge, so called
From ME hard difficult, inaccessible, impregnable, or
perhaps cheerless + castel castle, fortress, stronghold (see
CASTLE).
Tucker English (chiefly W Country): occupational name
for a fuller, from an agent deriv. of ME tuck(en) to full
cloth (OE tucian to torment). This was the term used for
the process in the Middle Ages in SW England, and the present-day
distribution of the surname still reflects this (see also FULLER
and WALKER). |
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