Find the word definition

Wikipedia
Martyn (surname)

Martyn, or Martin is the surname of one of The Tribes of Galway, Ireland.

Martyn (musician)

Martijn Deijkers (sometimes spelled Deykers), known professionally as Martyn, is a Dutch producer and DJ from Eindhoven, currently based in Ashburn, Virginia in the United States. He started his career by DJing drum and bass in 1996, but began to include more of a dubstep influence after first hearing Kode9's "Sine of the Dub". He released his first 12" singles in 2005, incorporating elements of both techno and jungle. Deijkers' first album, Great Lengths, was released in 2009. In 2010 he released Fabric 50, the 50th installment of the Fabric Mix DJ series. Martyn's second studio album, Ghost People, was released in 2011 on the American label Brainfeeder.

Martyn

Martyn may refer to:

  • Martyn (surname), one of the Tribes of Galway and others
  • Martyn (given name)
Martyn (given name)

Martyn is a given name which may refer to:

  • Martyn (musician), Dutch DJ
  • Martyn Woolford (born 1985), English footballer
  • Martyn Green(1899 – 1975), English actor and singer
  • Martyn Bennett (1971 – 2005), Scottish musician
  • Martyn Williams (born 1975), Welsh international rugby union player
  • Martyn Ware (born 1956), British musician and music producer
  • Martyn Brabbins (born 1959), British conductor
  • Martyn Rooney (born 1987), English sprinter
  • Martyn Waghorn (born 1990), English footballer
  • Martyn Joseph (born 1960), Welsh singer-songwriter
  • Martyn Finlay (1912–1999), New Zealand politician
  • Martyn Moxon (born 1960), English cricketer
  • Martyn Smith (disambiguation), various people
  • Martyn P. Casey (born 1960), English-born Australian bass guitarist
  • Martyn Margetson (born 1971), Welsh professional footballer

Usage examples of "martyn".

A wave of loneliness, excruciating in its intensity, engulfed Martyn and she closed her eyes.

It seemed to Martyn that her companion must be looking over her shoulder at this double image and she moved away from him and nearer to the picture.

The door was still locked but Martyn, emboldened by fresh air and a sense of freedom and adventure, tapped on the window and when the girl looked up pointed to the roses and held up Mr.

Miss Hamilton solved the problem by removing her dress, throwing it to Martyn and waiting to be inserted into her dressing-gown.

The new-comer planted a smacking kiss on it and fixed Martyn with a china-blue and bulging pair of eyes.

He twisted round in his chair and watched Martyn as she made a fruitless search of his overcoat pockets.

The instinct that makes us aware of a conversation in which we ourselves have in our absence been involved warned Martyn that they had been talking about her and had broken off on her entrance.

During the rare occasions on which she had time to reflect, Martyn anticipated a sort of personal zero hour, a moment when she would have to take stock, to come to a decision.

As Miss Hamilton had discovered a number of minor alterations to be made in her dresses, Martyn was of this company.

He entertained Martyn, instead, with a lively account of the eccentricities of Dr.

Jacko sententiously, and he leant so far back on the top of his step-ladder that Martyn hurriedly grasped it.

Miss Hamilton had no changes in the first act, and told Martyn she might watch from the front.

About half-way down the centre-aisle Adam Poole, made up and wearing a dressing-gown, sat between Jacko and a young man whom Martyn supposed to be a secretary.

Darcey seemed to Martyn to follow adequately the somewhat conventional die-hard the author had intended.

Miss Hamilton was completely silent, and to Martyn, humiliated and miserable, the necessary intimacies of her work were particularly mortifying.