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If someone last name is young what country is close to that surname?

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If someone last name is young what country is close to that surname?

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  1. http://www.nationaltrustnames.org.uk/

    If you use this website, you can get a Distribution Map in Great Britain for this surname.


  2. Do you want to know the origin of the surname Young, if so I found this on www.ancestry.com

    Young Name Meaning and History

    English, Scottish, and northern Irish: distinguishing name (Middle English yunge, yonge ‘young’), for the younger of two bearers of the same personal name, usually distinguishing a younger brother or a son. In Middle English this name is often found with the Anglo-Norman French definite article, for example Robert le Yunge.

    Americanization of a cognate, equivalent, or like-sounding surname in some other language, notably German Jung and Junk, Dutch (De) Jong(h) and Jong, and French Lejeune and LaJeunesse.

    assimilated form of French Dion or Guyon.

    Chinese: see Yang.

    Hope this  helps.

  3. There are also Koreans by this name - some of whom manufacture a very fine piano.

  4. England, Scotland, Ireland, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Norway, Sweden or China. Most Chinese spell it "Yung" or "Yong", but some use "Young". Some of the German and Scandinavians use "Jung" but change it to "Young" when they get to the USA, if they emigrate.

  5. That name was my grandparents last name- their family trced back to England

  6. This interesting surname is of Anglo-Saxon pre 7th century origin, and as such is one of the earliest known origins. The derivation is from the word 'geong', which developed into the Middle English 'yunge or yonge', and literally means 'The young one'. Curiously children of the same s*x in a medieval family were often given the same name, and to differentiate them a byname would be created and given (usually) to the younger bearers of the name baptismal name! The word was also used as a nickname for one who was 'young in heart', or appeared young, as in the example below. The surname is first recorded in the late 13th century, and from this developed the modern spelling forms which include Young, Younge, Youngs, Yong , Yonge and Ong(e). Early recordings include that of Wilferd seo Iunge, (Wilfred the son of Young) in the 744 a.d. Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, although this is not as a surname, whilst Richard le Yunge of Lichfield, Staffordshire, in 1301, strongly suggests a descriptive nickname which may not have become hereditary. Later recordings taken from the church registers include the marriage of Edmond Young and Katharyn Wendover on September 14th 1568, at Sudbury, and the christening of George, son of William and Frances Young on October 17th 1652 at St. James, Clerkenwell, London. One of the earliest settlers in the colonies of 'New England' was Nathaniell Young, who sailed from the Port of London, aboard the the ship 'Constance', bound for 'Virginea' on October 15th 1635. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Walter Yonge, which was dated 1296 in the Subsidy Rolls of Sussex, during the reign of King Edward 1, known as 'The Hammer of the Scots', 1272 - 1307.

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