Word info

Gervase

Proper noun

Meaning

Gervase

A male given name from the Germanic languages, common in the Middle Ages but rare today.

Source: en.wiktionary.org

Anagrams

Examples

1694 ) Deaths Virginia de' Medici died January 15 John Ogilvie (saint) died March 10 Cherubino Alberti died October 18 Gervase Helwys died November 20 Gerard Reynst died December 7 January March * January 15 Virginia de' Medici (b. Source: Internet

According to accounts left by the monk Gervase of Canterbury and eyewitness Edward Grim, they placed their weapons under a tree outside the cathedral and hid their mail armour under cloaks before entering to challenge Becket. Source: Internet

Gervase Markham edited and commented on the list in his The Gentleman's Academic, in 1595. Source: Internet

He was taken to the priory of Saint Gervase at Rouen, where he died on 9 September 1087. Source: Internet

Gervase Phillips, "Dai bach y soldiwr: Welsh soldiers in the British Army, 1914–1918." Source: Internet

Jacobs, pp. 282–83 and 288, and Ainger, p. 294 The comic opera was completed first: The Gondoliers (1889) was a piece described by Gervase Hughes as a pinnacle of Sullivan's achievement. Source: Internet

Close letter words and terms