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It includes the total number of people with each surname as well as the rate per 100,000 people. Figures for the 2000 Census are also included for comparison. [10] In 2010, there were 51,089,493 people with last names in the top 100, representing 16.5% of the total (308,745,538).
In English Canada, names follow much the same convention as they do in the United States and United Kingdom.Usually the "first name" (as described in e.g. birth certificates) is what a child goes by, although a middle name (if any) may be preferred—both also known as "given names."
Tremblay (French pronunciation: [tʁɑ̃blɛ]) is a French toponymic surname, especially common in French-speaking Canada. As of 2006, Tremblay was the most common surname in Quebec, Canada, accounting for 1.076% of the province's population. [1] Notable people with the surname include: Alfred Tremblay (1912–1975), Canadian prospector and ...
Clan MacTavish MacTamhais, MacTavish, McTavish, Mactavish, McThavish, Thave, MacTavis, M‘Tavish, Thomas, Thomson, Thompson Crest: boar’s head erased or langued gules within a plain circlet bearing the motto "NON OBLITUS" Motto NON OBLITUS ("Not Forgotten"). War cry CRUACH MOR Profile Region Highland District Argyll Plant badge The Jacobite Rose Pipe music "MacTavish Is Here" Chief Steven ...
In Slovenia the last name of a female is the same as the male form in official use (identification documents, letters). In speech and descriptive writing (literature, newspapers) a female form of the last name is regularly used. If the name has no suffix, it may or may not have a feminine version.
Originally the SS Statendam of Holland America Line ... RMS Empress of Canada [16] 1920 1922 . Atlantic, 1922–1939; wartime service, 1939–1943 1943 1928
Cree is a surname which has several separate origins in England, Scotland and Ireland. It occurs in all those countries today and also in Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States. It is of Medium Frequency in Scotland and Northern Ireland (using the benchmarks of the Guild of One-Name Studies)(Spathaky 1998).
Campbell is a Scottish surname —derived from the Gaelic roots cam ("crooked") and beul ("mouth")—that had originated as a nickname meaning "crooked mouth" or "wry mouthed." [2] Clan Campbell, historically one of the largest and most powerful of the Highland clans, traces its origins to the ancient Britons of Strathclyde. [3]