Dy (surname)

Dy
Origin
Region of originCambodia, England, Philippines
Other names
Variant form(s)
  • Chinese: Li
  • English: Dye, Dei

Dy is a surname in various cultures.

Origins

As an English surname, Dy is a variant spelling of Dye, which may have come from the Greek masculine given name Dionysios or its feminine form Dionysia. One early record of the surname Dy is in the 1379 poll tax returns of Yorkshire.[1] Another known origin of the surname is from the Chinese Filipino community, where Dy transcribes a Hokkien pronunciation of the Chinese surname spelled () in the Hanyu Pinyin transcription of its Mandarin pronunciation.[2] There is also a Cambodian surname transcribed as Dy (ឌី).

Statistics

The 2010 United States Census found 1,932 people with the surname Dy, making it the 15,232nd-most-common name in the country. This represented an increase from 1,422 (18,077th-most-common) in the 2000 census. In both censuses, slightly less than nine-tenths of the bearers of the surname identified as Asian, and about five percent as White.[3]

People

  • Pauline Dy Phon (ឌី ផុន; 1933–2010), Cambodian botanist at the National Museum of Natural History in France
  • Dy Saveth (ឌី សាវ៉េត; born 1944), Cambodian actress and the first Miss Cambodia (1959)
  • Benjamin Dy (1952–2013), Filipino politician
  • Luane Dy (born 1986), Filipino television personality
  • Denise Dy (born 1989), Filipino tennis player
  • Jason Dy (born 1990), Filipino singer
  • Rolando Dy (born 1990), Filipino mixed martial artist
  • Kim Kianna Dy (born 1995), Filipino volleyball player
  • Philbert Dy, Filipino film critic
gollark: Well, probably not *all* of them.
gollark: *begins breeding 56 dragons*
gollark: Viewing all breedable dragons, I mean.
gollark: Is there some convenient page for this?
gollark: That reminds me, need to breed my dragons to the AP again.

See also

References

  1. Bardsley, C. W. E. (1901). A dictionary of English and Welsh surnames, with special American instances. Oxford University Press. p. 260.
  2. Chu, Richard (2010). Chinese and Chinese Mestizos of Manila: Family, Identity, and Culture, 1860s–1930s. Brill. p. 410. ISBN 9789047426851.
  3. "How common is your last name?". Newsday. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
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