Moore (surname) explained

O'More
Meaning:"moor", "stately and noble"
Region:Ireland, Scotland, Wales, England, Spain, France
Origin:British Isles
Footnotes:Frequency Comparisons:[1]

Moore (pronounced or) is a common English-language surname. It was the 19th most common surname in Ireland in 1901 with 15,417 members.[2] It is the 34th most common surname in Australia, 32nd most common in England, and was the 16th most common surname in the United States in 2000.[3]

It can have several meanings and derivations, as it appeared as a surname long before written language had developed in most of the population, resulting in a variety of spellings.

Variations of the name can appear as Moore, More or Moor; as well as the Scottish Gaelic originations Muir, Mure and Mor/Mór; the Manx Gaelic origination Moar; the Irish originations O'More and Ó Mórdha; and the later Irish variants O'Moore and de Mora. The name also arises as an anglicisation of the Welsh epithet Mawr meaning great or large.[4]

The similarly pronounced surname Mohr is of Germanic lineage and is not related to the Gaelic/English variations.

Meanings and origins

Frequency

In the United States, "Moore" ranked 9th among all surnames in the 1990 census, accounting for 0.3% of the population.[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Moore Surname Meaning . forebears.co.uk . 20 January 2014.
  2. Web site: MOORE Surname Maps of Ireland .
  3. Web site: Frequently Occurring Surnames from the Census 2000 . United States Census Bureau, U.S. Department of Commerce. 2 November 2015 . 15 September 2014.
  4. Web site: Moore Name Meaning & More Family History .
  5. Book: Cairney, C. Thomas . 1989 . Clans and Families of Ireland and Scotland . Jefferson, North Carolina, United States, and London . . 54 . 0899503624.
  6. [United States Census Bureau]