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"stan" means stone or stony. Stanford = stony ford, Stansted= stony place There are many similar names such as Stanbridge and Stanton.

The caution comes when "stan" or "ston" comes at the end of a name. For example, you might think that Lullingstone means "the stone of Lulling". It doesn't and really means Lulling's tun. Tun can mean a farm, village or settlement. That is why you have to trace the earliest written form of the name. Spellings change so much - a favourite example comes from East London. Hoxton was Hochestone in the Domesday Book, but there is no stone there. It means Hoc's tun - ie a Saxon named Hoc once lived there and so it became known as Hoc's farm.

>> Hoxton was Hochestone in the Domesday Book, but there is no stone there.

Just a quick question on that one. Would "'s ton" have changed to 'stone' that early?If so I find that quite surprising and would have thought (until now) that if 'stone' appears in a Doomsday book entry then it probably means 'stone'. Just because there isn't a stone there now ...