Rambo

See also: rambo and RAMBO

English

Etymology

  • The name "Rambo" is of unknown origin. It can be dated back to the 17th-century Swedish immigrant Peter Gunnarsson Rambo. According to folk legend it is derived from the mountain Ramberget ("Raven’s Hill") in Gothenburg, whence the Swedish immigrants to Delaware originated in the 17th century.
  • "Rambo" is also the name of an old farm in Vestfold county, Norway ("Rambøe" 1664, "Ramboe" 1723) - and about 65 people in Norway have Rambo as a family name. The Old Norse form of the name might have been *Hrafnabú. The first element is then the genitive plurals of hrafn m. 'raven', and the last element is n. 'farm'. The name was brought to the US by Norwegian settlers.
  • "Rambo" became widely known after John Rambo, a fictional Vietnam War veteran and protagonist of the film series Rambo.

See also Japanese 乱暴 (rambō, rude; violent; rough; reckless).

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -æmbəʊ

Proper noun

Rambo

  1. A surname.

See also

Noun

Rambo (plural Rambos)

  1. (figuratively) One who is reckless, disregards orders, uses violence to solve all problems, and bravely charges headlong into the teeth of the enemy.
  2. An American variety of apple with a greenish-yellow skin, mottled and striped with dull red.

Synonyms

Derived terms

See also

References

Anagrams

Norwegian

Proper noun

Rambo

  1. a surname
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