Monahan
Monahan, and close variants, is a name of Gaelic origin, derived from manachán, a diminutive of Irish: Manach Latin: Monachus, a monk.[1][2] It may refer to:
Saints
- See Mainchín
People
Entertainment
- Dan Monahan (born 1955), American actor
- Darren Monahan, American Chief Information Officer and Producer, Obsidian Entertainment
- David Monahan (born 1971), American actor
- Gordon Monahan (born 1956), Canadian musician and composer
- Matthew Monahan (born 1972), American artist based in Los Angeles
- Meghan Monahan (born 2001), American artist
- Patrick Monahan (born 1969), American lead singer and songwriter for Train
- Patrick Monahan (comedian) (born 1976), Irish-Iranian stand-up comedian
- Sarah Monahan (born 1977), Australian actress
- William Monahan (born 1960), American screenwriter
Sports
- Garry Monahan (born 1946), retired Canadian professional ice hockey center
- Hartland Monahan (born 1951), retired Canadian ice hockey player
- Rinty Monahan (1928–2003), Major League Baseball pitcher
- Sean Monahan (born 1994), Canadian professional ice hockey player
- Shane Monahan (born 1974), former Major League Baseball outfielder and designated hitter
- Shane Monahan (rugby union), Irish professional rugby union player
Other
- Alfred Monahan (1877–1945), Anglican bishop of Monmouth
- Brian Monahan, Attending physician of the United States Congress
- Haven Monahan, the alleged perpetrator of the sexual assault in the now-retracted Rolling Stone article "A Rape on Campus"
- J. C. Monahan, American meteorologist and TV presenter
- Jay Monahan (born 1970) The Comissioner of the PGA Tour
- James G. Monahan (1855–1923), U.S. representative from Wisconsin
- Patrick J. Monahan (born 1954), Dean of Osgoode Hall Law School of York University in Toronto,
gollark: Yeees? I mean, I don't know how hard first aid is, but mortgages are trivial.
gollark: Anyway, maths is useful basically anywhere you'll need to analyze stuff quantitatively. Science, programming, engineering, finance, data science. School maths probably less so.
gollark: Your solution to a bad system is to make it involved in *more* important roles?
gollark: People should probably be expected to learn some things independently at some point.
gollark: I do wonder, though, has anyone actually tested whether train pathfinding time is brought to actually-significant levels with loops?
Notes and references
Citations
- Lanigan 1829, pp. 31.
- Wall 1905, pp. 83.
Primary sources
Secondary sources
- Lanigan, John (1829). The Irish Church (ed.). An Ecclesiastical History of Ireland, from the first introduction of Christianity among the Irish, to the beginning of the thirteenth century. Volume III (second ed.). Dublin: J. Cumming, 16, L. Ormond-Quay; London: Simpkin and Marshall; Edinburgh: R. Cadell and Co. pp. 30–32. Retrieved 10 October 2016.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Wall, James Charles (1905). J. Charles Cox (ed.). Shrines of British Saints, with numerous illustrations (PDF). Methuen & Co., 36 Essex Street WC, London, England. p. 83. Retrieved 10 October 2016.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link) (subscription required)
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