• We are currently performing site maintenance, parts of civfanatics are currently offline, but will come back online in the coming days (this includes any time you see the message "account suspended"). For more updates please see here.

The meaning of you're family name

The meaning of I'm family name is just the name of a very small village where my great-great-great-grandfather used to live.

Mine, too, is just the name of the place where my family (well, my father's side of the family) lived at the time when the law requiring fixed surnames for everyone came along. (Before then, an informal mix of patronymics, location names, job titles and other epithets was used to distinguish between different individuals with the same first name. To some extent, this usage continued in parallell with official surnames for a long time.)
 
He who boycotts Swingtown.
 
I believe mine means "by the field" in German.
 
Mine is a place name deriving from a region in Germany.
 
IIRC, more Germans immigrated to the US than any other group.

IIRC there was a serious debate about the national language, pretty much deadlocked between German and English.

My last name means "son of a fisherman" in irish. Apparently "Mc" as in "McDonald" "McArthur" "McCormick" means "son of" and then the afterword which is their speciality.
 
Mines pretty simple.

A person who bakes.
 
Mine says I'm a descendant of pirate queen Gráinne Mhaol Uí Mhaolmaigh, so I'm also descended from the Uí Mhaolmaigh clan.

My last name means "son of a fisherman" in irish. Apparently "Mc" as in "McDonald" "McArthur" "McCormick" means "son of" and then the afterword which is their speciality.

No, the afterword is the name of the father (some Gaels passed on nicknames instead). Traditionally, a person's surname would consist of Mac [insert father's name], then Ó [insert grandfather, or powerful ancestor here], but it changed over time so many would stick with the Mac [father's name]. In some places people have surnames of Mac [father] Mac [grandfather] Mac [great-grandfather], and so on, as far back as they could go.
 
Back
Top Bottom