bdNorth East.co.uk

Blyth Valley Citizens Advice Bureau

Address

The Eric Tolhurst Centre
3-13 Quay Road
Blyth
Northumberland
NE24 2AS



Email: -
TELEPHONE NUMBERS
PIN Tel: pin tel. no.
Main Tel: -
Fax No.: -
company phone details

Blyth Valley Citizens Advice Bureau Details:

Offering Service Of Information, Guidance And Support To Prevent Individuals Of Lack Of Knowledge Of Their Rights And Responsibilities Or Of The Service Available To Them And Influence To Develop Social Policies And Services.

Google Map for Blyth Valley Citizens Advice Bureau

Other Businesses near Blyth Valley Citizens Advice Bureau  The Eric Tolhurst Centre, 3-13 Quay Road, Blyth, Northumberland, NE24 2AS


View more companies near Blyth Valley Citizens Advice Bureau (NE24 2AS)....

Information about words in this company name or address

blyth

This ancient Scottish name is of locational origin, from the old barony of Blyth in the "lordship" of Lauderdale, in what is now the Borders region. The place was originally named from the Old English pre 7th Century "blithe", merry, cheerful, perhaps on account of its pleasant situation, or from a nearby river, which would have been so named for its merry, chattering sound. One James Blyth is recorded in ancient charters of the Earldom of Morton, in 1485, as a burgess of Dundee, and William Blitht was admitted burgess of Aberdeen in 1488. Richard Blyth was Member of Parliament for Dundee in 1567. Blyth was a common name among the Border Gypsies, a late "Queen" being Esther Faa Blyth, who died in July 1883. Among recordings of the name in Edinburgh is that of the marriage of Ludovick Blyth and Bessie Morrison, on January 17th 1673, and the christening of John, son of Thomas and Anna Blyth, on January 23rd 1677. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of William de Blyth, which was dated 1296, Documents relating to Scotland in the Public Records Office, during the reign of King Edward 1 of England, "The Hammer of the Scots", 1272 - 1307, .

valley

1. an elongated depression between uplands, hills, or mountains, esp. one following the course of a stream.
2. an extensive, more or less flat, and relatively low region drained by a great river system.
3. any depression or hollow resembling a valley.
4. a low point or interval in any process, representation, or situation.
5. any place, period, or situation that is filled with fear, gloom, foreboding, or the like: the valley of despair.
6. Archit.a depression or angle formed by the meeting of two inclined sides of a roof.
7. the lower phase of a horizontal wave motion.
1. valley, vale, natural depression, depression
usage: a long depression in the surface of the land that usually contains a river

citizens

1. a native or naturalized member of a state or nation who owes allegiance to its government and is entitled to its protection (distinguished from alien).
2. an inhabitant of a city or town, esp. one entitled to its privileges or franchises.
3. an inhabitant, or denizen: The deer is a citizen of our woods.
4. a civilian, as distinguished from a soldier, police officer, etc.
1. citizen, national, subject

usage: a native or naturalized member of a state or other political community
citizen, member of a state, native or naturalized, who owes allegiance to the government of the state and is entitled to certain rights. Citizens may be said to enjoy the most privileged form of nationality; they are at the furthest extreme from nonnational residents of a state (see alien), but they may also be distinguished from nationals with subject or servile status (e.g., slaves or serfs; see serf, slavery). (It should be noted, however, that in Great Britain and some other constitutional monarchies a citizen is called a subject.)

The term citizen originally designated the inhabitant of a town. In ancient Greece property owners in the city-states were citizens and, as such, might vote and were subject to taxation and military service. Citizenship in the Roman Empire was at first limited to the residents of the city of Rome and was then extended in A.D. 212 to all free inhabitants of the empire. Under feudalism in Europe the concept of national citizenship disappeared.

advice

1. an opinion or recommendation offered as a guide to action, conduct, etc.: I shall act on your advice.
2. a communication, esp. from a distance, containing information: Advice from abroad informs us that the government has fallen. Recent diplomatic advices have been ominous.
3. an official notification, esp. one pertaining to a business agreement: an overdue advice.
1. advice, proposal
usage: a proposal for an appropriate course of action

bureau

1. a chest of drawers, often with a mirror at the top.
2. a division of a government department or an independent administrative unit.
3. an office for collecting or distributing news or information, coordinating work, or performing specified services; agency: a travel bureau; a news bureau.
4. Chiefly Brit.a desk or writing table with drawers for papers.

1. agency, federal agency, government agency, bureau, office, authority, administrative unit, administrative body
usage: an administrative unit of government; "the Central Intelligence Agency"; "the Census Bureau"; "Office of Management and Budget"; "Tennessee Valley Authority"
2. chest of drawers, chest, bureau, dresser, furniture, piece of furniture, article of furniture
usage: furniture with drawers for keeping clothes