Carpenito (Italian)
I have heard my last name means little carpenter, but I have not read or seen anything that prooves this. Just wondering if anyone has anything different?
Replies
Most likely your last name is an Anglophone misspelling of "Carpineto", which in Italian means "Hornbeam Grove" and is a rather common placename in Italy.
Carpenito is not an Anglophone misspelling of Carpineto . As both names have long family trees ( excuse the pun ) in Italy to this very day . If it was an Anglophone misspelling then “ Carpenito “ would not be found on the Italian peninsula , and only in former colonial territories of the United Kingdom like the United States , when the reality is that the name in this exact spelling is indeed found there and has been for quite some time . Carpenito and Carpineto are just variations ( of which many exist such as Carpento , Carpentieri , Carpentario , Carpeneto , Carpineto as mentioned prior and etc ) of a surname which finds its origins from the Latin Carpinus meaning HornBeam Tree. Of which in Italy Carpinus Betulus L. ( The European Hornbeam Tree ) species is prominent. A Carpenter is one who shapes and fashions wood . It comes from the Latin ( Carpentarius meaning Carpenter ) which in turn also shares etymological roots with yet another Latin word ( Carpinus ) meaning “ horn “ or “ hard “ . Thus the root here - Carp - seems to be the focus of the two separate yet linked words which could have been influenced by the Gaulish ( or Celtic ) word unto Latin to describe hard .
Carpenter is from Latin via French and in Latin meant a coach builder or wainwright. Nothing to do with hornbeam. Latin carpentum (chariot, cart, cab) is ultimately Gallic, used alongside a n umber of synonyms.
Carpinus betulus, European Hornbeam
Nice tree, adaptable to many landscape situations and sites. Usually grown for reliable gold fall color and interesting fruit. I wouldn't mind being named for it. Check out this link for pictures and info:
http://hort.science.orst.edu/classes/hort226/cabe4.htm
Nice tree, adaptable to many landscape situations and sites. Usually grown for reliable gold fall color and interesting fruit. I wouldn't mind being named for it. Check out this link for pictures and info:
http://hort.science.orst.edu/classes/hort226/cabe4.htm
Thank you, the tree is beautiful.