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Having a Hispanized Filipino-Chinese surname signifies that a Chinese person has become Catholic. Some adopted the surnames of their Spanish godparents, while others combined modified Chinese names and added honorifics such as -co, -son, and -zon at the end. Many of them intermarried with Filipinos and were integrated into Philippine society.
Fix name of Ilocos Norte: 01:07, 7 July 2023: 3,750 × 4,109 (1.72 MB) TagaSanPedroAko: Uploaded a work by TagaSanPedroAko from * Base map: File:Blank map of the Philippines (primary LGUs).svg by Hariboneagle * Common surname info: province/city-level surname statistics (estimates) at Forebears (2014) with UploadWizard
This page was last edited on 18 September 2023, at 01:35 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Houlihan or O'Houlihan (Irish: Ó hUallacháin; feminine Ní Uallacháin) is a surname of Irish Gaelic origin, from the Irish uallach meaning "proud". Notable people with the surname include: Adam Houlihan (born 1978), former Australian rules footballer; Christopher Houlihan (born 1987), American concert organist; Con Houlihan (1925–2012 ...
This page was last edited on 18 September 2023, at 01:22 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Filipino given name Dranreb was invented by reversing the spelling of the English name Bernard, and someone calling himself Nosrac bears the legal name Carson. Joseph Ejército Estrada , the 13th president of the Philippines , began as a movie actor and received his nickname Erap as an adult; it comes from Pare spelled backwards (from ...
His name carried a significant amount of buzz near the trade deadline before he suffered a season-ending broken collarbone in Week 8. With a new regime led by first-year coach Liam Coen coming in ...
The dissemination of surnames were also based on the recipient family's origins. For example, surnames starting with "A" were distributed to provincial capitals, "B" surnames were given to secondary towns, and tertiary towns received "C" surnames. [8] Families were awarded with the surnames or asked to choose from them. [9]