An English and Irish surname from Middle English [in turn originating as an occupation], for someone who was a butler or wine servant.
A small town in Clark County, Wisconsin.
A village in Richland County, Ohio.
A city, the county seat of Butler County, Pennsylvania.
An outer suburb of Perth, Western Australia.
A borough of Morris County, New Jersey.
A small village in Montgomery County, Illinois.
A town, the county seat of Choctaw County, Alabama.
A town in Custer County, Oklahoma.
An unincorporated community in Freestone County, Texas.
A town in Wayne County, New York.
A home rule city in Pendleton County, Kentucky.
An unincorporated community in Baltimore County, Maryland.
A locality in Mohave County, Arizona.
A location in Canada
A village in Waukesha County, Wisconsin.
A city, the county seat of Bates County, Missouri.
An unincorporated community in Manitoba, Canada.
A locality in South Australia.
A ghost town in Fresno County, California.
A small city, the county seat of Taylor County, Georgia.
An Anglicized form of the French Boutilier, Boutillier, Bouthillier surname from French of similar derivation.
A tiny town in Day County, South Dakota.
A census-designated place in Delaware County, Oklahoma.
A small city in DeKalb County, Indiana.
An unincorporated community in Johnson County, Tennessee.
An unincorporated community in Bastrop County, Texas.
An English surname transferred from the nickname, originally a nickname for someone who either acted as if he were a lord or had worked in a lord's household.
The God of Abraham and the Jewish scriptures.
The Abrahamic deity of the Jewish, Christian, and Islamic faiths.
God the Father; the Godhead.
Jesus Christ, God the Son.
Any other deity particularly important to a religion or a worshipper.
A generic title used in reference to any peer of the British nobility or any peer below the dignity of duke and (as a courtesy title) for the younger sons of dukes and marquesses (see usage note).
The elected president of a festival.
A high priest.
A formal title of the lesser British nobility, used for a lord of the manor or Lord Proprietor.
Similar formal and generic titles in other countries.
An additional title added to denote the dignity of certain high officials, such as the "Lord Mayors" of major cities in the British Commonwealth
An interjection variously expressing astonishment, surprise, resignation.