- of
Russified patronymics;
nowadays few
Armenians use
patronymics outside of
official contexts. Many
Armenian surnames were once
patronymics first used by...
- this, a
large majority of
Scandinavian family names originated as the
patronymics borne by the
heads of
family at the
times when
these laws came into effect...
- name of a male ancestor.
Patronymic may also
refer to:
Patronymic suffix, a
suffix to
indicate the
patronymic derivation Patronymic surname, a
surname originated...
- the
difference between patronymics and
surnames ending with -ich:
surnames are the same for
males and females, but
patronymics are gender-dependent (for...
- the
early Islamic period (640–900 AD) and the Arab world, the use of
patronymics is well attested. The
famous scholar Rhazes (c. 865–925 AD) is referred...
- Generally:
Patronymic Matronymic Some
specific cultural examples:
Arabic name
Ethiopian name
Malay name
Mongolian name
Russian patronymics Scottish Gaelic...
- onwards.
Until then, the
Welsh had a
patronymic naming system. In 1292, 48 per cent of
Welsh names were
patronymics and, in some parishes, over 70 per cent...
- Sall is the
surname of the Lam Toro
dynasty (King of Toro) of
Senegal in the 15th century.
Moustapha Bayal Sall (born 1985),
Senegalese football central...
- Manana, Natia, Eka and Ana.
Georgian surnames are
derived either from
patronymics or, less frequently, from toponyms, with
addition of
various suffixes...
-
naming systems are of this type.
Patronymic systems:
apart from
their given name,
people are
described by
their patronymics, that is,
given names (not surnames)...