A female given name from English from the laurel plant.
A city in and one of the two county seats of Jones County, Mississippi; named for the laurel thickets in the area.
A city in Nebraska; named for early settler Laura Martin.
An unincorporated community in Washington.
An unincorporated community in West Virginia.
A neighbourhood of Edmonton, Alberta.
A city in Montana; named for the laurel bushes growing in the area.
A surname from Spanish.
A town in Indiana; named for the city in Maryland.
A municipality of the Philippines; named for Miguel Laurel.
A hamlet in New York.
An unincorporated community in Tennessee.
A census-designated place in Florida.
A city in Iowa; named for the community in Ohio.
A ghost town in Santa Cruz County, California.
A neighborhood of Oakland, California.
A city in Maryland.
An unincorporated community in Oregon; named for the trees growing in the area, thought to be laurels (later identified as madrones).
A town in Delaware; named for the laurel bushes growing in the area.
An unincorporated community in Ohio.
A river flowing from Lake, Kentucky into the Cumberland at Corbin, Kentucky.
A census-designated place in Virginia.
Formerly a 16- to 17-year-old participant in the Young Women organization of the LDS Church.
A female given name from English.
A city, the county seat of Casey County, Kentucky, United States.
A town, the county seat of Union County, Indiana, United States.
A number of townships in the United States, listed under Liberty Township.
A town, the county seat of Amite County, Mississippi, United States.
A city, the county seat of Liberty County, Texas, United States
A freed slave surname originating as an occupation.
A city, the county seat of Clay County, Missouri, United States.
A surname from French.
A male given name from English.