Ainsley
Pronunciation | /ˈeɪnzli/ |
---|---|
Gender | Unisex (mainly female) |
Origin | |
Word/name | Scotland |
Other names | |
Related names | Ainslie, Ainsleigh, Ainslee, Aynsley |
Ainsley (also spelt Ainsleigh) is both a unisex given name and a surname and place name. It is derived from words meaning hermitage and clearing.[1]
Notable people with the name include:
Given name
Men
- Ainsley Battles (born 1978), American football player
- Ainsley Bennett (born 1954), British sprinter
- Ainsley Hall (born 1972), Cayman Islands cricketer
- Ainsley Harriott (born 1957), English television chef
- Ainsley Maitland-Niles (born 1997), English footballer
- Ainsley Waugh (born 1981), Jamaican sprinter
- Ainsley Melham (born 1991), Australian actor
- Ainsley Iggo (1924–2012), Scottish neurophysiologist
- Ainsley Robinson, Canadian wrestler
- A. C. de Zoysa (1923–1983), Sri Lankan criminal lawyer
Women
- Ainsley Earhardt (born 1978), American television news anchor
- Ainsley Gardiner, film producer from New Zealand
- Ainsley Gotto (1946–2018), Australian businesswoman
- Ainsley Howard, English actress
- Ainsley Hamill, Scottish singer
Surname
Ainsleigh
- Daniel Ainsleigh (born 1976), English actor and acting coach
Ainsley
- George Ainsley (1915–1985), English footballer and manager
- Jack Ainsley (born 1990), English footballer
- Jacqui Ainsley (born 1981), English model
- John Mark Ainsley (born 1963), English opera singer
- William Ainsley (1898–1976), English coal miner and politician
See also
- Ainsley Canal, a short canal in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
- Ainsley House, a building in Campbell, California, United States
- Ansley, a parish in Warwickshire, England
- Aynsley, a given name and surname
- Aynsley China, a British manufacturer
- Ainley, a surname
- Ainslie (disambiguation)
References
- ^ "Meaning, origin and history of the name Ainsley".
Name list
This page or section lists people that share the same given name or the same family name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article.