Proper noun
A hamlet in the Rural Municipality of Brokenhead, Manitoba, Canada.
An English surname, a variant of Tindall/Tyndale/Tindill.
A small city, the county seat of Bon Homme County, South Dakota, United States.
Source: en.wiktionary.orgM. Tyndall hearing thys, ful of godly zeale, and not bearing that blasphemous saying, replied againe & sayde: I defie the Pope and all his lawes: and further added, that if God spared hym life, ere many yeares he would cause a boy that driueth the plough to know more of the Scripture, then he did. John Foxe
Tyndall (who assuredlie sheweth himself in myn opynyon rather to be replete with venymous envye rancour and malice then with any good lerning vertue knowlage or discression). Thomas Cromwell, 1st Earl of Essex
According to Alexander Ellis (in pages 24–25 of his definitive English translation of Helmholtz), the similarity of German "ober" to English "over" caused a Prof. Tyndall to mistranslate Helmholtz' term, thus creating "overtone". Source: Internet
A fierce fighter for women’s rights, she’s penned hits for such up and comers as Kaie Shorr and Casey Tyndall while also taking part as co-emcee in the Song Suffragettes showcase and the MeToo movement’s crossover into country realms. Source: Internet
Blyton's granddaughter, Sophie Smallwood, wrote a new Noddy book to celebrate the character's 60th birthday, 46 years after the last book was published; Noddy and the Farmyard Muddle (2009) was illustrated by Robert Tyndall. Source: Internet
Additionally, I really appreciated that M.L. Tyndall was not afraid to include passion and attraction in her book while still keeping it G-rated. Source: Internet