Circeus's Personal Name List
Arsenault
From French arsenal meaning "workshop". This is the occupational surname for someone who worked at an arsenal.
Audet
Southern French nickname from Gascon dialect audet "bird", variant of standard Occitan ausèl (modern French oiseau).
Beaudoin
Usage: French (Quebec), French
Bergeron
Usage: French
Pronounced: BEHR-ZHU-RAWN
Diminutive of French berger meaning "shepherd".
Bernier
Usage: French
Pronounced: BEHR-NYEH
Bérubé
Habitational name from some minor place named with Old French bel ru "beautiful stream", with the subsequent pleonastic addition of bé, variant of bel "beautiful".
Boisvert
Usage: French
Pronounced: BWA-VEHR
Means "green wood" in French, from bois "wood" and vert "green".
Bolduc
Probably from an old Germanic name with the roots
baldi and
dux, the Italian
Balducci has the same etymology
Boutin
Diminutive from the Germnic given name
Bodo.
Breton
French and English: ethnic name for a Breton, from Old French
bret (oblique case
breton) (see
Brett).
Carrier
From
carrier, "quarrier, someone who works in a quarry". cf
Carrara.
Champagne
Usage: French
Pronounced: SHAHN-PAN
regional name for someone from
Champagne, named in Latin as
Campania (from
campus "plain", "flat land"). This is also the name of various villages in France, and in some cases the family name may derive from one of these.
Cyr
From the Latin personal name Quiricus or Cyricus, Greek Kyrikos or Kyriakos, ultimately from Greek kyrios 'lord', 'master'.
Demers
From French meaning "of the seas". A famous bearer of this surname was Modeste Demers, a bishop in 18th century Vancouver.
Deschenes
"Chenes" is French for "oak tree". In French, "Des" means more than one. "Des"+ "Chenes"= Deschenes meaning "Many oak trees."
Dion
Usage: French
Pronounced: DYAWN(French) DZYAWN(Quebec French)
Meaning uncertain. It may be a habitational name from any of various locations called Dion or Dionne, derived from the Gaulish element
divon- meaning "(sacred) spring" or Celtic
dēwos meaning "god, deity". Alternatively, it may come from the given name
Dion or
Didon, the latter of which may be derived from the Germanic element
þeudō meaning "people". A famous bearer of this name is Celine Dion (1968-), a Canadian singer.
Drouin
Usage: French (Quebec), French
From the Old French given name
Drouin, of Frankish origins.
Dubé
Probably a variation of
Dubec.
Dubec
Geographical du bec "from the stream". Bec (from Germanic baki) is a regional term in Normandy for a stream.
Duchesne
Usage: French
Pronounced: DUY-SHEHN
Fillion
Usage: French, French (Quebec)
Probably a diminutive of fils or fille, respectively "son" and "daughter". May have alluded to the bearer being the youngest amongst siblings.
Fortin
Usage: French
Pronounced: FAWR-TEHN
Gagné
Usage: French (Quebec, Modern)
Pronounced: gahnyeh(Quebec French)
From
Gagnier/
Gagner (cf.
Gagner), alternative form of
Gagneux/
Gagneur ("ferm laborer"), from Old French
gaignier, "to farm, to work the earth".
Gay
Nickname for a lighthearted or cheerful person, from Middle English, Old French gai.
Gélinas
Usage: French, French (Quebec)
Gendron
Usage: French
Pronounced: ZHAHN-DRAWN
Either a diminutive of French gendre meaning "son-in-law" or a habitational name for someone from the town of Gendron in Belgium.
Giguère
Usage: French, French (Quebec)
Unclear, possibly from Middle French giguer ("to dance, to frolick") but could also refer to the gigue, a medieval three-string vielle, which would suggest a musical profession.
Gingras
Usage: French (Quebec), French
Western France variant of
Gingreau, possibly derived from Old French
ginguer ("to frolick, to dance")
Goulet
Usage: French (Quebec), French
Of uncertain origin and meaning. Theories include a derivation from Old French goule "mouth" (combined with a diminutive suffix), in which case this name would have been a nickname for a glutton.
Grenier
Occupational name for a grain merchant (from Latin granarius), or a topographic name for someone who lived by a granary (from Latin granarium) or a metonymic occupational name for someone who supervised or owned one.
Hamel
topographic name for someone who lived and worked at an outlying farm dependent on the main village Old French hamel (a diminutive from an ancient Germanic element cognate with Old English hām "homestead"); or a habitational name from (Le) Hamel the name of several places in the northern part of France named with this word.
Houle
Either from Old French
hole,
houle, "hole, cave", or a deformation of
Houde.
Laflamme
Means "The Flame" in French.
Landry
From the Germanic personal name Landric, a compound of land "land" and ric "powerful, ruler".
LaPierre
Usage: French
Personal remark: Middle capital is inappropriate
Larouche
After any of the various locations called La Rouche in France.
Leduc
From the Old French title of rank duc "duke" (from Latin dux "leader" genitive ducis) with the French masculine definite article le used as a nickname for someone who gave himself airs and graces or else as a metonymic occupational name for a servant employed in a ducal household.
Legault
Usage: Norman (Gallicized)
Pronounced: lə-GAHLT
From the French "le Gaul," meaning simply "the Gaul." Gaul refers to the northern part of modern-day France.
Lemay
Usage: English (Canadian)
Lemieux
Usage: French (Anglicized)
Lessard
Usage: French
Pronounced: LEH-SAR
Name for someone who lived in a clearing, derived from French l'essart meaning "the assart" (a term for cleared forest land used for agriculture). It is also a habitational name for someone from any of various locations named Lessard or Lessart, of the same origin and meaning.
Lussier
Occupational name from old French ussier "usher, doorkeeper".
Ménard
Usage: French
Pronounced: MEHN-AHRD
From the Old German given name
Meginhard, making it a cognate of
Maynard. A notable bearer was André Ménard, Governor General in the French colonial empire.
Nadeau
Variant of Nadal, which can be a name or the meaning "Christmas".
Also, natali is latin for "birthday"
A form of Noel.
Ouellette
Canadian spelling of French (Norman and Champenois)
Ouilet, from a Frenchified form of
Willet, a pet form of
William.
Paquette
From the personal name
Paquet, a pet form of
Pascal.
Paquin
Usage: French
Pronounced: PA-KWIN
Originated in east France. This last name signified a freehold that permitted use of a cluster of land or pastures. The name became “he who possesses lands” and "he who is wise."
Paradis
From a learned variant of Old French pareis "Paradise" (from Greek paradeisos). As a toponym this was applied to verdant places and it is quite common as a place name in Nord and Normandy; the surname therefore can be a topographic or habitational name.
Paré
Unclear. Possibly occupational for a pareur, a textile worker that smooths and flattens the fabric.
Perron
Probably a diminutive of
Pierre.
Raymond
From the Norman personal name Raimund, composed of the Germanic elements ragin "advice, counsel" and mund "protection".
Robitaille
Usage: French
Pronounced: RAW-BEE-TIE
Of uncertain meaning.
Savard
Usage: French
Pronounced: SA-VAR
Either from Old French
savart meaning "wasteland" or the Germanic elements
sab of uncertain meaning and
hard meaning "brave, hardy".
Simard
From the Germanic name
Siegmar via the French form Simar.
St Pierre
Usage: French
Personal remark: Should be written with a dash
Tardif
Usage: French, French (Quebec)
From Latin
tardivus, "slow". Given its unusually frequency as a family name and derivatives like
Tardieu or
Tardivel, it may have been a medieval given name.
Tessier
Occupational Name For A Weaver, From Old French Tissier (From Late Latin Texarius, A Derivative Of Texere ‘To Weave’). It Is Also Found In England As A Surname Of Huguenot Origin. Compare
Tacey.
Theriault
Possibly from the Greek "therion" which means a beast of a nondescript nature.
Vachon
French definition, cattle herder.
Vashon English variant.
Vaca Spanish.
Vaillancourt
Possibly a variant of Valencourt. This is the surname of a noble family who probably lived near Willencourt.
Vallée
topographic name for someone who lived in a valley from Old French
valee "valley" (from Latin
vallis) or a habitational name from (La) Vallée the name of several places in various parts of France. Compare
Lavallée.
Veilleux
variant of veilleur, a night guard of nightwatch.
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