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Origin; Language(s) Irish: Region of origin: Ireland: O'Shea is a surname and, less often, a given name. It is an anglicized form of the Irish patronymic name Ó ...
Other names; Anglicisation(s) O'Shea: Ó Sé is a surname of Irish origin. People with name include: Dáithí Ó S ...
O'Dea (/ oʊ ˈ d iː / oh-DEE; Irish: Ó Deághaidh, formerly Ua Deághaidh), is an Irish surname derived from Deághaidh, the name of a tenth-century clan chieftain. [1] According to historian C. Thomas Cairney, the O'Deas were one of the chiefly families of the Dal gCais or Dalcassians who were a tribe of the Erainn who were the second wave of Celts to settle in Ireland between about 500 ...
Brek Shea (born 1990), American soccer player; Charles W. Shea (1921–1994), United States Army officer; Cornelius Shea (1872–1929), American labor leader and crime boss; Danny Shea (footballer) (1887–1960), English footballer
Flournoy is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Angela Flournoy, American novelist; Anne Flournoy (born 1952), American writer, producer and film director; Craig Flournoy (born 1951), American journalist, Pulitzer Prize winner
In 1963, Noël Coward created the part of the fish and chips peddler "Ada Cockle" specifically for O'Shea in his Broadway musical, The Girl Who Came to Supper. Her performance of traditional Cockney tunes charmed the critics and helped win her a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. [6] In 1963, O'Shea was a guest on The Ed ...
Scarlett (G.I. Joe), a female character whose actual name is Shana O'Hara; Dr Eleanor O'Hara, a female main character from American medical comedy-drama TV series Nurse Jackie, referred to mostly as just O'Hara; Spike O'Hara, the main character in the NES game Ghoul School; Moira O'Hara, a female side character in American Horror Story: Murder ...
O'Hare is one of the few surnames which resisted the general tendency in the 18th century to discard the "Ó" in their name. [ citation needed ] Generally, the distinctive mark of an Irish surname is "Mac" or "Ó", according to the Latin: Per Mac atque O, tu veros cognoscis Hibernos; His duobus demptis, nullus Hibernus wades , which has been ...