Lloyd (surname)
The name Lloyd is a variation of the Welsh word llwyd or clwyd, which means "grey" or "brown" (Llwyd is also used as a personal name). The double-l represents the voiceless alveolar lateral fricative of Welsh, and was sometimes also represented as fl, yielding the related name Floyd which can also be a variation of the family name Flood
Notable people named "Lloyd"
- A.L. Lloyd (Albert Lancaster Lloyd) (1908–1982), English ethnomusicologist
- Alex Lloyd (born 1974), Australian singer-songwriter
- Alex Lloyd (born 1984), IndyCar race driver
- Alice Spencer Geddes Lloyd (1876–1962), American social reformer
- Andrew Lloyd Webber, Baron Lloyd-Webber (born 1948), English composer of musical theatre
- Anthony Lloyd (born 1984), English footballer
- Benjamin Lloyd (1839–?), American Civil War Medal of Honor recipient
- Bill Lloyd, American soccer coach
- Blake Lloyd, Canadian engineer
- Bobby Lloyd (c.1888–1930) , Welsh international rugby union player
- Cariad Lloyd, British actress
- Carli Lloyd (born 1982), American soccer player
- Carli Lloyd (born 1989), American volleyball player
- Charles W. Lloyd (1915–1999 , educationalist and headmaster of Dulwich College
- Cher Lloyd (born 1993), English singer
- Christopher Lloyd (born 1938), American character actor
- Clive Lloyd (born 1944), West Indian cricketer
- Colin Lloyd (born 1973], English darts player
- Daniel Lloyd (born 1980), English professional road racing cyclist
- Daniel Lloyd (born 1982), bilingual Welsh actor and singer-songwriter
- Daniel Lloyd (born 1992), British racing car driver
- Daniel B. Lloyd, U.S. Navy admiral
- Danielle Lloyd (born 1983), British glamour model
- Danny Lloyd (born 1973), American child actor
- David Lloyd (born 1948), former professional tennis player and founder of the David Lloyd Tennis Clubs
- David Lloyd George, 1st Earl Lloyd George of Dwyfor (1863–1945), British politician and Prime Minister
- Edward Lloyd (died 1713) coffeehouse owner (see also below for Lloyd's)
- Major General Edward Lloyd (Colonial Governor), governor of Maryland Colony 1709–1714
- Edward Lloyd (1744–1796), Maryland delegate to the Continental Congress
- Edward Lloyd (1779–1834), governor of Maryland in the United States 1809–1811
- Edward Lhuyd (1660–1709), Welsh naturalist, botanist, linguist, geographer and antiquary
- Frank Lloyd (1886–1960), English/American film director and producer
- Frank Lloyd (born 1952), British horn player and teacher
- Frank Lloyd III (1929-1995), Australian actor
- Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959), American architect
- Gareth David-Lloyd (born 1981), Welsh actor
- Gaylord Lloyd (1888-1943), American actor
- Genevieve Lloyd (born 1941), Australian philosopher and feminist
- Geoffrey Lloyd (1902–1984), British Conservative politician
- Geoff Lloyd, (born 1973), British radio DJ
- George Lloyd (1913–1998), British late-Romantic composer
- George Ambrose Lloyd, 1st Baron Lloyd (1879–1941), British High Commissioner of Egypt
- George Lloyd (bishop of Chester) (1561–1615), Welsh Anglican bishop
- George Lloyd (bishop of Saskatchewan) (1861–1940), Anglican minister and theologian
- Gordon W. Lloyd (1832–1905), English/American architect
- Gweneth Lloyd (1901–1993), cofounder of Royal Winnipeg Ballet
- Harold Lloyd (1893–1971), American actor and filmmaker known for his silent film comedies
- Henry Lloyd (governor) (1852–1920), governor of Maryland
- Henry Lloyd (soldier) (c. 1718–1783), Welsh army officer and military writer
- Henry Demarest Lloyd (1847–1903), American journalist
- Henry J. Lloyd (1794–1853), English amateur cricketer
- Henry Lloyd (priest) (1911–2001), Anglican priest
- H. S. Lloyd (1887–1963), British dog breeder
- Jake Lloyd (born 1989), American actor
- Jess Lloyd (born 1995), British swimmer
- Jessica Raine (born 1982), real name Jessica Lloyd, English actress
- Jim Lloyd (born 1954), Australian politician
- John Lloyd (born 1954), British tennis player
- John Lloyd (born 1943), former head coach to Wales national rugby union team
- Julian Lloyd Webber (born 1951), composer, cellist & brother of Andrew Lloyd Webber
- Larry Lloyd (born 1948), English footballer
- Llewellyn Lloyd (1877–1958), Welsh international rugby union player
- Lucy Lloyd (1834–1914) was the creator along with Wilhelm Bleek of the 19th century archive of ǀxam and !kun texts
- Lulu Hull Lloyd, namesake of California Institute of Technology's Lloyd House
- Mary Helen Wingate Lloyd (1868–1934), American horticulturist
- Marie Lloyd (1870–1922), music hall singer
- Matthew Lloyd (born 1978), Australian rules footballer and Coleman Medallist
- Nicholas Lloyd (born 1942), British journalist
- Norman Lloyd (1914–), American actor, producer and director
- Norman Lloyd (1895–1983), Australian landscape painter
- Norman Lloyd (1909–1980), American composer and pianist
- Percy Lloyd (1871–1959), Wales national rugby player
- Raymond Lloyd (born 1964), American professional wrestler better known as Glacier
- Richard Lloyd (born 1951), American founding member of punk band Television
- Richard Lloyd (born 1945), British driver and multiple racing team founder
- Richard Hey Lloyd (born 1933), British organist and composer
- Ridgway Robert Syers Christian Codner Lloyd (1842–1884) , English physician and antiquary
- Robert Lloyd (1733–1764), English poet and satirist
- Robert Lloyd (born 1940), English bass, opera singer
- Sabrina Lloyd (born 1970), American actor
- Sam Lloyd (born 1963), American character actor and nephew of Christopher Lloyd
- Sampson Lloyd, co-creator of Lloyds Bank, the first bank in Birmingham, England
- Samuel Loyd (1841–1911), American puzzle author and recreational mathematician
- Selwyn Lloyd, Baron Selwyn-Lloyd (1904–1978) British politician and general
- Seth Lloyd (born 1960), professor of mechanical engineering at MIT
- Seton Lloyd (1902–1996), British archaeologist
- Sian Lloyd (born 1972), Welsh television news presenter
- Siân Lloyd (born 1958), Welsh weather presenter
- Terry Lloyd (1952–2003), British television journalist killed in Iraq
- Tommy Lloyd (born 1974), American basketball coach
See also
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