Day

See also: Appendix:Variations of "day"

English

Etymology 1

This surname has multiple origins. Besides the ones listed below, Norman origin has also been suggested from De Haie",[1] or "a corruption of the Normandy French D'Ossone, from the town of Ossone, in Normandy". [2]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /deɪ/
  • Rhymes: -eɪ

Proper noun

Day

  1. A surname originating as a patronymic derived from a medieval diminutive of David.[3]
  2. An English surname originating as an occupation from day as a word for a "day-servant", an archaic term for a day-laborer,[4] or from given names such as Dagr, Daug, Dege, and Dey, cognate with Scandinavian Dag.[5]
  3. A surname from Irish can be found as both Day and O'Day from Ó Deághaidh (descendant of a person named Good Luck).
  4. A number of places in the United States:
    1. An unincorporated community in Modoc County, California.
    2. A census-designated place and unincorporated community in Lafayette County, Florida.
    3. A township in Montcalm County, Michigan.
    4. An unincorporated community in Isanti County, Minnesota.
    5. An unincorporated community in Taney County, Missouri.
    6. A town in Saratoga County, New York.
    7. A town in Marathon County, Wisconsin.
Derived terms
See also

References

  • Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges : A Dictionary of Surnames. Oxford University Press 1988.
  • Notes:
  1. Elisabeth Alice Gibbens Cole, An Account of Our Day Family of Calvert County, Maryland (1940), p. 49.
  2. Day Surname Origin & Last Name Meaning at Ancestor Search.
  3. Day Surname Origin & Last Name Meaning at Ancestor Search.
  4. Ernest Weekley, The Romance of Words (1927), p. 165.
  5. Susa Young Gates, Surname Book and Racial History (1918) p. 289.

Proper noun

Day

  1. A Mbum-Day language of Chad.

Anagrams

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