Stone

See also: stone

English

Etymology

Proper noun

Stone (countable and uncountable, plural Stones)

  1. (countable) An English occupational and habitational surname from Old English, for someone who lived near a stone worked with stone, from Old English stan.
  2. (countable) A male given name
  3. A placename:
    1. A locale in England:
      1. A village in Stone with Bishopstone and Hartwell parish, Buckinghamshire, previously in Aylesbury Vale district (OS grid ref SP7811).
      2. A village in Ham and Stone parish, Stroud district, Gloucestershire (OS grid ref ST6895).
      3. A village and civil parish in Dartford borough, Kent (OS grid ref TQ5774). [1]
      4. A hamlet in Maltby parish, Metropolitan Borough of Rotherham, South Yorkshire (OS grid ref SK5589).
      5. A market town and civil parish with a town council in Stafford borough, Staffordshire (OS grid ref SJ9034). [2]
      6. A village and civil parish in Wyre Forest district, Worcestershire (OS grid ref SO8575). [3]
    2. A locale in the United States.
      1. An unincorporated community in California.
      2. An unincorporated community in Indiana.
      3. An unincorporated community in Kentucky; named for coal businessman Galen L. Stone.
      4. An unincorporated community in Wisconsin.
    3. Ellipsis of Stone County.

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