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Lloyd is a Welsh surname originating with the
Welsh Welsh may refer to: Related to Wales * Welsh, referring or related to Wales * Welsh language, a Brittonic Celtic language spoken in Wales * Welsh people People * Welsh (surname) * Sometimes used as a synonym for the ancient Britons (Celtic peopl ...
adjective ''llwyd'', most often understood as meaning "
grey Grey (more common in British English) or gray (more common in American English) is an intermediate color between black and white. It is a neutral or achromatic color, meaning literally that it is "without color", because it can be compos ...
" but with other meanings as well. The name can be used both as a given name and as a surname. The name has many variations and a few derivations, mainly as a result of the difficulty in representing the initial double-L for non-Welsh speakers and the translation of the Welsh diphthong ''wy''. Lloyd is the most common form of the name encountered in the modern era, with the Welsh spelling ''Llwyd'' increasingly common in recent times. The vast majority of Wales continued to use the patronymic system well into the early modern period, and the families that used family surnames passed on from one generation to the next remained exceptional. However, the name ''Lloyd/Llwyd'' and certain other Welsh adjectives such as ''goch'' ("red", evolving into the Welsh surname
Gough Gough ( ) is a surname. The surname probably derives from the Welsh (English: "red"), given as a nickname to someone with red hair or a red complexion or as a reduced form of the Irish McGough which itself is an Anglicized form of Gaelic , a patro ...
) became "fixed
epithet An epithet (, ), also byname, is a descriptive term (word or phrase) known for accompanying or occurring in place of a name and having entered common usage. It has various shades of meaning when applied to seemingly real or fictitious people, di ...
" passed on through the generations and functioned as family surnames as early as the 14th century.


Meanings

The name ''Lloyd/Llwyd'' originates with the Welsh adjective ''llwyd'', usually understood to mean "grey" and can be distinguished as a "fixed
epithet An epithet (, ), also byname, is a descriptive term (word or phrase) known for accompanying or occurring in place of a name and having entered common usage. It has various shades of meaning when applied to seemingly real or fictitious people, di ...
" passed on from one generation to the next, as early as the 14th century. However, the word ''llwyd'' also has other meanings, especially if buttressed with other nouns or adjectives, such as ''penllwyd'' (grey-headed) and ''llwydwyn'' (grey-white). In addition to "grey" as most commonly understood, ''llwyd'' also includes shades of brown, according to T.J. Morgan and Prys Morgan. Lloyd as a boy's name is pronounced . It is of Welsh origin, and the meaning of Lloyd is "grey-haired; sacred", from Llwyd. The name may originally allude to experience and wisdom, and probably denoted a person entitled to respect. By the time that the adjective ''llwyd'' became a fixed epithet and then a family name, ''llwyd'' had more or less lost its original meaning of "grey". T. J. and Prys Morgan note As an adjective, ''llwyd'' also held the meaning or connotation of 'holy' during the medieval period, affecting characteristic adjective lenition. A medieval Welsh scribe or a scribe familiar with the Welsh language would understand that the usage of the mutated form of ''llwyd'', and ''lwyd'' was employed to convey the sense of "holiness". Therefore, as a surname Llwyd/Lloyd "retains the radical consonant after the persona name, masc. and fem alike". The Anglo-Norman scribe would not be familiar enough with medieval Welsh orthography to know that ''ll'' was used for the
voiceless alveolar lateral fricative The voiceless alveolar lateral fricative is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents voiceless dental, alveolar, and postalveolar lateral fricatives is , ...
and generally used ''l'' for the initial ''ll'' and its lenited version, single ''l'' except that occasionally attempts were made to show that the sound was ''l'' with a difference.


Variations

Variations most often encountered illustrate the degree to which Anglo-Norman and later English scribes sought to render the sounds unfamiliar to their own diction. The voiceless "unilateral hiss" was often rendered as ''thl'' or ''ffl'', or left with a single ''l''. Another challenge was with the Welsh diphthong ''wy'' ( �ior �ɨapproximately as in the word "gooey" pronounced as one syllable) which was rendered by the closest English approximation ''oy''. Most modern variations of Lloyd/Llwyd originate in the Tudor period, and are largely "corruptions" of llwyd. Variations include: ''Ffloyd'', ''Flewett'', ''Flewitt'', ''Flood'', ''Floed'', ''Floyde'', ''Flowitt'', ''Flude'', ''Fludd'', ''Fludde'', ''Flude'', ''Fluett'', ''Fluat'', ''Flyd'', ''Flyde'', ''Lide'', ''Lhuyd'', ''Loud'', ''Loulld'', ''Luyd'', ''Llowyde'', ''Llowyd'', ''Lloyed'', ''Lloilld'', ''Llwyed'', ''Thoyd'', ''Thloyd'', and ''Thllewyd''.'' Lloyd has become the most common form of the name in all parts of Wales today, and with the double-L pronounced as a single-L (without the voiceless, "unilateral hiss"), and the use of a single-L in the spelling is rare. The "more correct" spelling (or the spelling more closely matching the Welsh ''llwyd'') ''Llwyd'' had long ceased to be used as a version of the name until fairly recently, "as Lloyd has been deliberately changed to Llwyd in a number of cases in our own time".


See also

*
List of people with given name Lloyd This is a list of people with given name Lloyd. * Lloyd (singer) (born 1986), American R&B artist * Lloyd Oscar Abeyaratne (1893-1978), Sri Lankan Sinhala pediatrician * Lloyd Alexander (1924–2007), American writer, author of '' The Chronicles o ...
* List of people with surname Lloyd


Notes

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lloyd (Name) Surnames of Welsh origin Welsh masculine given names English-language surnames