Meaning Taylor
What does Taylor mean? Here you find 21 meanings of the word Taylor. You can also add a definition of Taylor yourself

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Taylor


surname, attested from late 12c., variant of tailor.
Source: etymonline.com

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Taylor


Marshall Taylor (nicknamed "Major"), was the second internationally famous African American professional athlete and arguably the best American cyclist, ever. Though he was regularly [..]
Source: wgwheelworks.com

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Taylor


Marshall Taylor (nicknamed "Major"), was the second internationally famous African American professional athlete and arguably the best American cyclist, ever. Though he was regularly [..]
Source: centurycycles.com

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Taylor


(n) United States composer and music critic (1885-1966)(n) United States film actress (born in England) who was a childhood star; as an adult she often co-starred with Richard Burton (born in 1932)(n) [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Taylor


called The Water-Poet, who confesses he never learnt so much as the accidence. He wrote fourscore books, and afterwards opened an alehouse in Long Acre. (1580–1654.)
Source: bartleby.com

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Taylor


(b. 1800; d. 1886). “Isaac Comnenus” (1827); “Philip Van Artevelde” (1834); “The Statesman” (1836); “Edwin the Fair” (1842); &am [..]
Source: bartleby.com

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Taylor


(b. Lavenham, August 17th, 1787; d. Stanford Rivers, Essex, June 28th, 1865). “The Elements of Thought” (1822); “Memoir of his Sister Jane” (1825); “Histor [..]
Source: bartleby.com

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Taylor


(b. Stanford Rivers, May 2nd, 1829). “Words and Places” (1865); “Memorials, Biographical and Literary, of the Taylor Family of Ongar” (1867); “Etruscan Res [..]
Source: bartleby.com

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Taylor


Bishop of Down and Connor and of Dromore (b. Cambridge, August 15th, 1613; d. Lisburn, August 13th, 1667). “Sermon on the Gunpowder Treason” (1638); “Of the Sacred Order and [..]
Source: bartleby.com

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Taylor


“The Water Poet” (b. Gloucester, about 1580; d. 1654). “Travels in Germany” (1617); “Penniless Pilgrimage” (1618); “The Praise of Hempsee [..]
Source: bartleby.com

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Taylor


(b. London, May 15th, 1758; d. Walworth, November 1st, 1835). “Elements of a New Method of Reasoning on Geometry” (1780); “A Dissertation on the Eleusinian and Bacchic Myste [..]
Source: bartleby.com

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Taylor


(b. 1817; d. July 12th, 1880). “Diogenes and his Lantern” (1849); “The Vicar of Wakefield” (1850); “The Philosopher’s Stone” (1850); & [..]
Source: bartleby.com

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Taylor


From an English surname that originally denoted someone who was a tailor, from Norman French tailleur, ultimately from Latin taliare "to cut".Its modern use as a feminine name may have been influenced [..]
Source: behindthename.com

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Taylor


Marshall Taylor (nicknamed "Major"), was the second internationally famous African American professional athlete and arguably the best American cyclist, ever. Though he was regularly bullied by racist competitors who ganged up to defeat him; restricted by race promoters who allowed only white racers; and even harassed by death thr [..]
Source: bikeline.com

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Taylor


Nathan. Coach of the men’s cross country and track teams. Came here from Penn, obviously a big improvement for him. His track record proves it: The Red won the Heptagonal Championships in eight of the last 11 years, including 14 of the last 22 combined Indoor and Outdoor Ivy League titles.
Source: freshman.cornellsun.com

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Taylor


Taylor made his chief contribution to economic theory in his 1928 presidential address to the American Economic Association, in which he laid out the ...
Source: dictionaryofeconomics.com

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Taylor


Harriet Taylor was born in London on 8 October 1807 and died at Avignon on 3 November 1858. A Unitarian doctor's daughter, she was beautiful, mainly ...
Source: dictionaryofeconomics.com

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Taylor


Marshall Taylor (nicknamed "Major"), was the second internationally famous African American professional athlete and arguably the best American cyclist, ever. Though he was regularly [..]
Source: bicyclecentercc.com

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Taylor


popular in the 1990s and 2000s. * '''2001''', Paul Theroux, ''Hotel Honolulu'', page 206: *: "I wanted to call her Taylor, but my husband said no," Sweetie was telling one of the Christmas party gu [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Taylor


(6). "Father" of scientific management. Chief developer and promoter of Taylorism.
Source: udmercy.edu

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Taylor


From an English surname that originally denoted someone who was a tailor, from Norman French tailleur, ultimately from Latin taliare "to cut".Its modern use as a feminine name may ha [..]
Source: behindthename.com




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