Eaton
English
Alternative forms
- (surname): Aton
Etymology
From Old English Eatun (literally “homestead by a river or on an island”), from ea (“river”) + tun (“homestead”). As a surname, it is given to someone living near a river or on an island, or any of the various places in England called "Eaton". See also Eton, which is a doublet.
Proper noun
Eaton (countable and uncountable, plural Eatons)
- A surname
- A placename
- A number of places in England:
- A village in Cheshire East district, Cheshire.
- A former civil parish containing Eaton Hall in Cheshire West and Chester borough, Cheshire, now part of Eaton and Eccleston civil parish (OS grid ref SJ4160).
- A village in Rushton parish, Cheshire West and Chester, Cheshire (OS grid ref SJ5763).
- A village and civil parish in Melton borough, Leicestershire (OS grid ref SK7929).
- A village in Norfolk, a suburb of Norwich, England.
- A village and civil parish (served by Gamston with West Drayton and Eaton Parish Council) in Bassetlaw district, Nottinghamshire (OS grid ref SK7178).
- A hamlet in Appleton-with-Eaton parish, Vale of White Horse district, Oxfordshire (OS grid ref SP4403).
- A small village in Eaton-under-Heywood parish, Shropshire (OS grid ref SO4990). [1]
- A place in Australia
- A suburb of Bunbury, Western Australia.
- A suburb of Darwin, Northern Territory; named for Charles Eaton, a RAAF officer.
- A locality in Canada
- Former name of Eatonia. A town in Chesterfield, Saskatchewan; named in honour of Timothy Eaton, founder of the Eaton's department store chain and mail-order catalogue service.
- A locality in the United States:
- A town in Indiana.
- A town in New Hampshire; named for Theophilus Eaton, the first governor of New Haven Colony.
- A town in New York; named for William Eaton.
- A city, the county seat of Preble County, Ohio; named for William Eaton, a commander in the First Barbary War.
- A statutory town in Oklahoma.
- A town in Brown County, Wisconsin.
- A town in Manitowoc County, Wisconsin.
- A town in Clark County, Wisconsin.
- A number of places in England:
- (countable) An English habitational surname from Old English.
Derived terms
References
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