York

Etymology
From, , from , , from , from , ultimately from (compare 🇨🇬, from 🇨🇬, from 🇨🇬), from. .

Proper noun

 * 1) A placename
 * 2) A place in the United Kingdom:
 * 3) A place in Canada:
 * 4) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 5) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 6)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) A place in Canada:
 * 2) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 3) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 4)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 2) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 3)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 2) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 3)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 2) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 3)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 2) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 3)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 2) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 3)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 2) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 3)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 2) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 3)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) The House of York, a dynasty of English kings and one of the opposing factions involved in the 15th century Wars of the Roses. The name comes from the fact that its members were descended from Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York; their symbol was a white rose.
 * 2) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 3)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.
 * 1) A royal dukedom traditionally given to the second son of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom.
 * 2)  from the city or the county; See also Yorke.

Translations

 * Arabic: يورك
 * Armenian: Յորք
 * Belarusian: Ёрк
 * Bengali: ইয়র্ক
 * Bulgarian: Йорк
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 約克
 * Mandarin:
 * Cornish: Evrek
 * Corsican: York
 * Esperanto: Jorko
 * Finnish:
 * French:, Yorck, Yorque
 * Georgian: იორკი
 * German:
 * Greek: ,
 * Ancient: Ἐβόρακον
 * Gujarati: યૉર્ક
 * Hebrew: יורק
 * Hindi: यौर्क
 * Icelandic: Jórvík
 * Irish: Eabhrac
 * Italian: York
 * Japanese: ヨーク
 * Kannada: ಯೋರ್ಕ್
 * Kazakh: Йорк
 * Korean: 요크
 * Kurdish:
 * Central Kurdish: یۆرک
 * Kyrgyz: Йорк
 * Lao: ຢອຣ໌ກ, ຢອກ
 * Latin: Eborācum, Eborāca
 * Latvian: Jorka
 * Lithuanian: Jorkas
 * Macedonian: Јо́рк
 * Malayalam: യോർൿ
 * Marathi: यॉर्क
 * Mazanderani: یورک
 * Norman: Évèroui, Éverouic
 * Occitan: York, Yòrk
 * Old English: Eoforwīċ
 * Old Norse: Jórvík
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: Iorque
 * Russian:
 * Scots: York
 * Scottish Gaelic: Eabhraig
 * Sinhalese: යෝර්ක්
 * Spanish:, Yórk
 * Tamil: யார்க், யொர்க், யோர்க்
 * Telugu: యోర్క్
 * Thai: ยอร์ก
 * Ukrainian: Йорк
 * Urdu: یورک
 * Welsh: Caerefrog, Efrog
 * Western Panjabi:
 * Yiddish: יאָרק


 * Esperanto: Jorko
 * Greek:
 * Japanese: ヨーク家
 * Marathi: यॉर्क
 * Portuguese: Iorque


 * Marathi: यॉर्क


 * Marathi: यॉर्क
 * Swedish: yorkbo

Etymology
.

Etymology
.

Etymology
From, a form of , from. Compare, , directly from the Old English form.

Descendants


ả====References====

Etymology
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