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last names
lmaoitsmexP
post Apr 8 2005, 07:58 PM
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I've been wondering........Where do last names come from? Do the kings give out last names to people? Or do they make up their own last names?
 
miss barnes
post Apr 8 2005, 08:07 PM
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i have nooo idea buddy!
 
*Solipsist*
post Apr 8 2005, 08:08 PM
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Last names used to be the first names of your dad or whatnot.
eg: Lief Erikson was Erik the Red's son.
Blahblahblah

- Solipsist
 
EmmalieV
post Apr 8 2005, 08:11 PM
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insanitys contagious.
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QUOTE
 
What’s In A Name? How Did Surnames Come to Be?
Lesson One of Curriculum Unit:
What's in a Name?
Introduction
In the early years of the Middle Ages, most people in Europe lived in small farming villages. Everyone knew his neighbors, and there was little need for last names. But as the population expanded and the towns grew, a need arose to find ways to differentiate between two people who shared the same first name.

Because the British were among the first Europeans to settle in North America, many modern American surnames can be traced back to medieval England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. Common adjectives used as bynames often referred to size - such as Little, Short, or Long—or to hair color or complexion—such as White, Black, or Red (which evolved into Reed). Sometimes, an adjective was combined with a noun to form a byname, like Longfellow or Blackbeard. Names such as Stern and Stout (meaning stout-hearted, not fat) described temperament, while Drinkwater implied someone with a powerful thirst. John Peacock must have been rather vain! A name might also refer to social status, such as Squire, Knight, or Bachelor. And Palmer described a pilgrim who had returned from the Holy Land. (It was traditional for such pilgrims to bring back a palm as a sort of souvenir.)

Names derived from the Gaelic tongue are less easily deciphered by modern English-speakers: Cameron means “crooked nose,” Kennedy means “ugly head,” and Connolly means “valiant


What more answers ? google it like I did.
 

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