Medford

/ˈmɛdfərd/ noun

Definition

A city name used in multiple locations across the United States, most notably in Massachusetts and Oregon. Originally meaning a river crossing or ford at a meadow.

Etymology

From Old English 'mǣd' (meadow) plus 'ford' (shallow river crossing). The compound name describes a practical geographical feature - a place where travelers could cross a river through meadowland, which became desirable for settlement establishment.

Kelly Says

Medford, Massachusetts was the birthplace of 'Jingle Bells' - James Lord Pierpont composed the famous Christmas song there in 1857! The name perfectly captures early American settlement patterns, where communities grew around practical river crossings in fertile areas.

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.