patronymic|patronymics in English

noun

['pætrə'nɪmɪk]

family name

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1. No one calls you by your patronymic ?

2. The name Bather is a patronymic surname that comes from the Welsh personal name Atha

3. History and Etymology for Czarevna. Russian tsarevna, from tsar' + -evna (feminine patronymic suffix)

4. Arents is a Dutch and German patronymic surname ("son of Arent")

5. As a kind of historical memory, the patronymic linkage naming system is very universal in Tibeto - burmans.

6. Recorded as Bes, Bess, Besse, and diminutives Bessie, Beesey, Bessey, Beazey, patronymics Bessom and Besson and possibly others, this is an English surname

7. A person's patronymic consists of his or her father's first name accompanied by a suffix meaning "son of" or daughter of.

8. While non-patronymic Bynames are rare in period, occupational ones are among the most common of category within this group

9. Name Strings/Identifiers/Cognomens [edit edit source] Patronymics, identifiers, and Cognomens are included in one name string and placed in the given name field

10. In addition, the genealogies based on the patronymic linkage naming system have become the cherish material for those who are engaged in national study.

11. As to how Batt became (sometimes) Bass and the diminutives or patronymics Basson etc can only be put down to dialectal changes in the middle ages and later

12. The original form of the surname Bather featured the distinctive Welsh patronymic prefix "-ab," meaning "son of." The name was ab-Atha, which gradually became Batha

13. Documents dating between 1521 and 1524 attest that he had assumed the Cognomen Lieto, the Italian version of Laetus, substituting this for his actual patronymic, Allegri.

14. Her other nickname, Kō no Naishi, is a combination of the first character of her patronymic family name — taka or kō — and her position serving Emperor En'yū, naishi.

15. Back then we didn't lose our satellites, and look at what's happening now, " said Galina Sergeyevna, who gave only her name and patronymic, referring to space program setbacks."

16. Last name meaning Abbes: This most interesting and unusual surname is a variant of 'Abbs, itself a nickname patronymic form of the popular 'Abel' introduced by returning Crusaders from the Holy Land

17. The Broeker family name began to be used in the powerful German region of Prussia.Broeker was one of the German patronymic names, derived from the given name of the father of the initial bearer

18. From the Greek name Ἀριστείδης (Aristeides), derived from ἄριστος meaning "best" and the patronymic suffix ἴδης ().This name was borne by the 5th-century BC Athenian statesman Aristides the Just, who was renowned for his integrity

19. With regard to the choice of name, as a result of the process of acculturation, there was a tendency especially among Greeks living abroad, for example in the United States, to use those first names or patronymics that were easiest to pronounce or write.

20. The Benison surname is a patronymic, created from the Medieval given name Benne, which comes from the Latin word "benedictus," which means "blessed." Some instances of the surname may also be derived from the name of the village of Benson (Benington) in Oxfordshire (Bennesingtun in Old English).

21. Anderson is a surname deriving from a patronymic meaning "son of Andrew" (itself derived from the Greek name "Andreas", meaning "man" or "manly").It originated in parallel in the British Isles and the Nordic countries.

22. Extract Professor Scott in his paper on ‘Eurynome and Eurycleia’ (in the April number of the Classical Quarterly) was inclined to believe, although he did not press the point, that Eurynome and Actoris were one and the same servant, the name Actoris being a patronymic.

23. Their name comes from having lived in Yorkshire, in the parish of Bossall.While the surname is largely considered local, there are other possible origins of this name.It may be of patronymic origin, based on the first name of the father and would have derived as "the son of Bussell."

24. The Act also reaffirms the right of any abandoned child or any child whose parentage is unknown to a patronymic family name, thereby enabling that child to obtain any official documents and certificates and avoid the embarrassment and other discrimination associated with the absence of a family name.

25. Last name meaning Blaver: This interesting and unusual surname with variant spellings Blavier, Blev(i)er, Blavir, Blavor, Bliver etc., recorded in European and English church registers from the mid 17th Century, is believed to be a patronymic form of the Norman-French occupational name "laveur", washer, the initial "b" being a shortening of the Celtic prefix "ab", son of, especially common in