the name addison
i was looking up the name addison and it said that the meaning ment the son of adam. so i found out this was a boys name at one time but now a popular girls name but what does it mean the son of adam
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Just as, when surnames were first coming into use, the son, John, of a man named Robin could become known as John Robinson, so the son of a man named Adam could become known as Adamson or, in a more slurred version, Addison. (Robin's daughter, Sally, would be identified as "Robin's Sally" until she married Fred, when she became "Fred's Sally". Her children would take their father's name as a matter of course.)
Of course, once surnames became generally used, all of John Robinson's own sons and daughters would be Firstname Robinson. At this point, I suppose, the surname stopped meaning "son of" and started meaning "descendant of".
I think that most parents give their children names they like rather than names with an appealing meaning. At present it is fashionable to use surnames as given names for both boys and girls. A girl named Addison isn't said to be male, any more than a girl named Melanie "should" have dark hair rather than blonde.
Of course, once surnames became generally used, all of John Robinson's own sons and daughters would be Firstname Robinson. At this point, I suppose, the surname stopped meaning "son of" and started meaning "descendant of".
I think that most parents give their children names they like rather than names with an appealing meaning. At present it is fashionable to use surnames as given names for both boys and girls. A girl named Addison isn't said to be male, any more than a girl named Melanie "should" have dark hair rather than blonde.
Yes. The meaning hasn't changed just because it's now used for girls.