Gordon means 'large fortification, or hill near meadows'. It is of old English or Gaelic origin.
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∙ 12y agoyou don't mean the musician Gordon Lightfoot?
'Gordon' - it's the same as English.
The word Gordon does not appear in Macbeth or any of Shakespeare's works.
Gordon is not a Hebrew name, so it would be pronounced the same as in English, and spelled גורדון
Poet of the camera.
First, the word "Gordon" does not appear in Macbeth anywhere, or indeed in any of Shakespeare's works. And although it is the family name of a family from the Scottish borders, we have no reason to believe that any of the characters in Shakespeare's play either had that name or spoke about anyone with that name.
It means that someone messed up and did something dim-wittedy, like Charlie Gordon.
James Logan Gordon has written: 'The weight of a word' 'Whither America?' -- subject(s): Civilization, Home, Marriage
I'm guessing you mean Groudon. No, he does not evolve.
Jean Baptiste Requien
Gordon Gordon Gordon Gordon Gordon
Gordon is of Old English and Gaelic origin, and means "large fortification". Interestingly the Spanish word gordo means large as well, specifically "fat".