culver/ˈkʌlvə/EtymologyFrom Middle English culver, from Old English culufre, culfre, culfer, possibly borrowed from Vulgar Latin *columbra, from Latin columbula (“little pigeon”), from Latin columba (“pigeon, dove”).culver means A surname. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 81 out of 100.culver is pronounced /ˈkʌlvə/.nameA surname.A number of places in the United States:; A town in Marshall County, Indiana.A number of places in the United States:; A minor city in Ottawa County, Kansas.A number of places in the United States:; An unincorporated community in Elliott County, Kentucky.A number of places in the United States:; An unincorporated community and township in Saint Louis County, Minnesota.A number of places in the United States:; An extinct town in Bates County, Missouri.nounA dove or pigeon, now specifically of the species Columba palumbus.“Had he ſo doen, he had him ſnatcht away, / More light then Culuer in the Faulcons fiſt.”A culverin, a kind of handgun or cannon.“Falcon and culver on each tower / Stood prompt, their deadly hail to shower; […]”