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  2. African-American names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_names

    This applied to both given names and surnames. [5] [6] Paustian has argued that black names display the same themes and patterns as those in West Africa. [7] With the rise of the 1960s civil rights movement and the wider counterculture of the 1960s, there was a dramatic rise in African-American names of various origins.

  3. Ethnonymic surname - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnonymic_surname

    Ethnonymic surnames are surnames or bynames that originate from ethnonyms.They may originate from nicknames based on the descent of a person from a given ethnic group. Other reasons could be that a person came to a particular place from the area with different ethnic prevalence, from owing a property in such area, or had a considerable contact with persons or area of other ethnicity.

  4. Black Dutch (genealogy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Dutch_(genealogy)

    Black Dutch is a term with several different meanings in United States dialect and slang. It generally refers to racial , ethnic or cultural roots. Its meaning varies and such differences are contingent upon time and place.

  5. Black (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_(surname)

    Black is a surname which can be of either English, Scottish, Irish or French origin. In the cases of non-English origin, the surname is likely to be an Anglicisation . Notable persons with that surname include:

  6. Ebony (given name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebony_(given_name)

    Ebony is an English feminine given name often given in reference to the color black or to the ornamental wood. It has been particularly well used by Black people in the United States. It was among the one thousand most popular names for American girls between 1971 and 2005, but has since declined in usage.

  7. Mulatto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mulatto

    The English term and spelling mulatto is derived from the Spanish and Portuguese mulato. It was a common term in the Southeastern United States during the era of slavery. Some sources suggest that it may derive from the Portuguese word mula (from the Latin mūlus), meaning 'mule', the hybrid offspring of a horse and a donkey.

  8. Redbone (ethnicity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redbone_(ethnicity)

    Redbone is a term historically used in much of the southern United States to denote a multiracial individual or culture. Among African Americans the term has been slang for fairer-skinned Black people, often for women specifically or for Black people with red undertones.

  9. Surname - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surname

    In some Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America, a woman may, on her marriage, drop her mother's surname and add her husband's surname to her father's surname using the preposition de ("of"), del ("of the", when the following word is masculine) or de la ("of the", when the following word is feminine).

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