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Where does the surname Maycock originate from?

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Where does the surname Maycock originate from?

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  1. Well, according to my dictionary of old English surnames, May is a diminutive of Matthew, and as for c**k, it could well be an obscene nickname but it also meant a hill. So it would be Matthew's hill. Or Matthew's something else, lol!


  2. Maycock : origin & meaning:

    English: from a pet form of May

    May : origins & meanings:

    English, French, Danish, Dutch, and German: from a short form of the personal name Matthias (see Matthew) or any of its many cognates, for example Norman French Maheu.

    English, French, Dutch, and German: from a nickname or personal name taken from the month of May (Middle English, Old French mai, Middle High German meie, from Latin Maius (mensis), from Maia, a minor Roman goddess of fertility). This name was sometimes bestowed on someone born or baptized in the month of May; it was also used to refer to someone of a sunny disposition, or who had some anecdotal connection with the month of May, such as owing a feudal obligation then.

    English: nickname from Middle English may ‘young man or woman’.

    Irish (Connacht and Midlands): when not of English origin (see 1–3 above), this is an Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Miadhaigh ‘descendant of Miadhach’, a personal name or byname meaning ‘honorable’, ‘proud’.

    French: habitational name from any of various places called May or Le May.

    Jewish (Ashkenazic): habitational name from Mayen, a place in western Germany.

    Americanized spelling of cognates of 1 in various European languages, for example Swedish Ma(i)j.

    Chinese:  possibly a variant of Mei 1, although this spelling occurs more often for the given name than for the surname.

    Cape May, at the mouth of Delaware Bay, is named after the Dutch explorer Cornelius Jacobsen May.

  3. eurcock   or uragay

  4. c**k didnt mean p***s back then, it refer to a small hill or a rooster. mathew was probably a chicken farmer.

  5. UK answer

    I found this for you,

    Surname: Maycock

    Recorded in a variety of spellings including Maycock, Meacock and Mecock, this is an English surname. It derives from "Mahieu" a short form of the hebrew personal name Matthew, a name introduced into Europe by the famous Knight Templars (Crusaders). This was on their return from the various unsuccessful expeditions to free the Holy Land from the Muslims, it being the fashion to call ones children by biblical names in honour of the fathers exploits. In this case the old English or Anglo-Saxon suffix "cocca", used to denote "son of", was added as a patronymic. The name in its many and varied spellings has been well recorded since the 13th Century; and examples taken from early surving charters, rolls and registers of the medieval period include: Maicoc, le Crouder, in the Assize Court rolls of the county of Lancashire in 1284, and Thomas Macok in the Pipe Rolls of Derbyshire in the Subsidy Rolls of 1327. Other recordings from a later period are those of Elizabeth Maycoke in London in 1548. This was during the first year of the reign of King Edward V1, known as 'The boy king', whilst Alice Mecock, was christened at St Andrews by the Wardrobe in the city of London on December 8th 1616, and Ann Meacock, married Edward Whitcombe at St George's chapel, Mayfair, on October 15th 1754. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of William Maycock. This was dated 1323, when he was a witness at the Assize Court of Stafford. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

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