A male or female given name transferred from the surname.
An unincorporated community in Missouri.
An unincorporated community in New Jersey.
An unincorporated community in Kentucky.
An unincorporated community in Wisconsin.
An unincorporated community in West Virginia.
A village in Illinois.
A town in Indiana.
A city, the county seat of Shelby County, Ohio; named for English poet Philip Sidney.
A town in Arkansas.
A city, the county seat of Richland County, Montana; named for Sidney Walters, a 6-year-old early settler.
A city, the county seat of Cheyenne County, Nebraska; named for railroad executive Sidney Dillon.
A town in Delaware County, New York, and a village within the town; named for British naval officer Sidney Smith.
An English habitational surname from Old English [æt þǣre] sīdan īeġe (“[at the] wide island”).
A city, the county seat of Fremont County, Iowa; named for Sidney, Ohio.
An unincorporated community in Texas.
A town in Maine; named for Philip Sidney.
A town in British Columbia; named for nearby Sidney Island, itself for Royal Navy hydrographer Frederick W. Sidney.
An unincorporated community in Manitoba.
A unisex given name transferred from the surname.
The state capital of New South Wales, Australia, and the most populous city in Australia.
A seaport and former city in Nova Scotia, Canada, now part of the amalgamated Cape Breton Regional Municipality on Cape Breton Island.
A surname from Old English, a spelling variant of Sidney.
An unincorporated community in Hillsborough County, Florida, United States.