e/Sidney (name origin)

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has glosseng: ::For use of Sidney or Sydney see Sidney (disambiguation) or Sydney (disambiguation) Sidney or Sydney was originally an English surname. Theories of its origin are: *As with many English surnames, from the name of a place where an ancestor came from: Anglo-Saxon [æt þǣre] sīdan īege = "[at the] wide island/watermeadow (in the dative case). *A contraction of the French place name Saint-Denis, the patron saint of France, which was brought to England by the Normans. Hanks & Hodges point out that there is little evidence to support this derivation and it may be the result of folk etymology . Reaney & Wilson state that "The name is usually derived from St. Denis (Normandy) but proof is lacking". , which in England became "Sidney" through folk etymology when the Plantagenets became English. The folk etymology process takes something new and relates it to something known. Thus the two origins could both exist with the current result. The Statue of St. Denis on Notre Dame Cathedral shows him holding his head in his hands, supported by angels, with a demon and axe below: St. Denis carried his severed head to the peak of Montmartre.
lexicalizationeng: Sidney
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