- 2,675
- people in the U.S. have this name Get contact details for people named Barbara Green
Meaning & Origins
From Latin, meaning ‘foreign woman’ (a feminine form of barbarus ‘foreign’, from Greek, referring originally to the unintelligible chatter of foreigners, which sounded to the Greek ear like no more than bar-bar). St Barbara has always been one of the most popular saints in the calendar, although there is some doubt whether she ever actually existed. According to legend, she was imprisoned in a tower and later murdered by her father, who was then struck down by a bolt of lightning. Accordingly, she is the patron of architects, stonemasons, and fortifications, and of firework makers, artillerymen, and gunpowder magazines.
| 16th in the U.S. for 2011 |
English: one of the most common and widespread of English surnames, either a nickname for someone who was fond of dressing in this color (Old English grēne) or who had played the part of the ‘Green Man’ in the May Day celebrations, or a topographic name for someone who lived near a village green, Middle English grene (a transferred use of the color term). In North America this name has no doubt assimilated cognates from other European languages, notably German Grün (see Gruen).
| 40th in the U.S. for 2011 |
Nicknames & variations
Barbra, Babs, Barbs, Barbera, Barreba, Barbie, Barb
Greene, Greer, Greenwood, Greenberg, Greenfield, Greenlee, Greenwald, Greenwell, Greenway, Greenleaf
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