Find the word definition

Wikipedia
Nuttall

Nuttall may refer to:

Nuttall (name)

Nuttall is an English surname, possibly derived from the small village of that name in Bury parish, Lancashire, and first found in the 13th century. It is a very common name in parts of Lancashire from the 16th century onward.

  • Amy Nuttall (b. 1982), British actress
  • Anthony Nuttall (1937–2007), English literary critic
  • Anthony Nuttall (rugby league) (b. 1968), Irish rugby league footballer
  • Bill Nuttall (b. 1948), American soccer player and businessman
  • Billy Nuttall (b. 1920), English footballer
  • Carrie Nuttall, photographer
  • Charles Nuttall (1872–1934), Australian artist
  • Christopher G. Nuttall (b. 1982), Scottish writer
  • David Nuttall (b. 1962), British politician
  • Edmund Nuttall (priest) (d. 1616), Canon of Windsor
  • Sir Edmund Nuttall, 1st Baronet (1870–1923), British civil engineer
  • Edward Nuttall (b. 1993), New Zealand cricketer
  • Enos Nuttall (1842–1916), clergyman
  • Geoffrey Nuttall (1911–2007), clergyman
  • George Nuttall (1863–1937), British-American bacteriologist
  • Gordon Nuttall (b. 1953), Australian politician
  • Harry Nuttall (politician) (1849–1924), British politician
  • Harry Nuttall (footballer) (1897–1969), English footballer
  • Harry Nuttall (racing driver) (b. 1963), British auto racing driver
  • Henry Nuttall (1855–1945), English cricketer
  • Jack Nuttall (1929–1992), Australian rules footballer
  • James Nuttall (1840–1907), professional British runner
  • James W. Nuttall (b. 1953), United States Army major general
  • Jeff Nuttall (1933–2004), British poet
  • John Mitchell Nuttall (1890–1958), English physicist
  • Joseph Nuttall (1869–1942), English swimmer
  • L. John Nuttall (1834–1905), English Latter-Day Saint
  • L. John Nuttall (educator) (1887–1944), acting president of Brigham Young University
  • Kate Henshaw-Nuttall (b, 1971), Nigerian actress
  • Katharina Nuttall (b. 1972), Norwegian artist, composer, and music producer
  • Keir Nuttall, musician
  • Michael Nuttall (b. 1934), South African Anglican bishop
  • Mike Nuttall, British-American designer
  • Nicholas Nuttall (1933–2007), 3rd Baronet, heir to construction fortune
  • Nick Nuttall (b. 1958), spokesperson/Head of Media UN Environment Programme
  • Pat Nuttall (b. 1953), British virologist and acarologist
  • Paul Nuttall (b. 1976), British politician
  • Robert Nuttall (1908–1983), English footballer
  • Sonja Nuttall, British fashion designer
  • Thomas Nuttall (1786–1859), English botanist and zoologist
  • Tom Nuttall (1889–1963), English footballer
  • Wilmer John Nuttall (1920–2003), Canadian politician
  • Zelia Nuttall (1857–1933), US archaeologist

Usage examples of "nuttall".

In addition to the species just described at least two or three others occur in the Nuttall Codex, but so conventionalized that it is out of the question to hazard a guess at their identity.

Maya codices, but we have introduced figures of two from the Nuttall Codex.

A comparison of this figure with the glyphs in the Nuttall Codex seems to leave little doubt that it represents a crocodile.

What is doubtless the same turtle is pictured in several places in the Nuttall Codex.

In the Nuttall Codex, the head of the king vulture occurs repeatedly as a glyph for this day.

In the Nuttall Codex, what is undoubtedly the harpy eagle is of frequent occurrence.

He was heir to the ailing Baron Onslow, who lived at Nuttall Grange a mere five or six miles away.

I would take you to Nuttall Grange in Leicestershire to meet your grandfather.

Michaux, Thomas Nuttall, John Lyon, and others pretty much beyond counting.

Thomas Nuttall, a bright but unschooled journeyman printer from Liverpool who came to America in 1808 and discovered an unexpected passion for plants.

Joyce, and you also, Sir Henry Nuttall, we shall hold ye excused from attending these meetings until ye have further notice from us.

In that same year, 1818, Caspar Wistar died, but he did gain a certain unexpected immortality when a botanist named Thomas Nuttall named a delightful climbing shrub after him.

Thomas Nuttall, the man who named the wisteria after Caspar Wistar, came to America as an uneducated printer but discovered a passion for plants and walked halfway across the country and back again, collecting hundreds of growing things never seen before.

Selby and Nuttall, new mines were sunk, until soon there were six pits working.

Zelia Nuttall thinks that the description of the vision bears such a very strong resemblance to a bas relief found in Guatemala that they must have a common origin.