Brighton
proper noun
- place name
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈbɹaɪtən/ / [ˈbɹaɪ̯ʔən]
name
Etymology: (place): Originally a colloquial clipping of Brighthelmstone, from Old English Beorthelmestūn (“Beorthelm's farm”). Became the official name in the early 19th century. : (surname): From Breighton in Yorkshire.
- A placename:
“Sarah Harvey, an NHS worker from Brighton, was also told by Vodafone that she had to pay a £5,800 bill run up after she was hit on the head by a cyclist, again in Barcelona this summer.”
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
“(historical)”
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A placename:
- A surname.
- Brighton & Hove Albion F.C.