Dizon
English
Etymology
Common Filipino surname, of Hokkien origin
Statistics
- According to the 2010 United States Census, Dizon is the 5837th most common surname in the United States, belonging to 5924 individuals. Dizon is most common among Asian/Pacific Islander (85.99%) individuals.
Anagrams
Cebuano
Etymology
From Hokkien 二孫/二孙 (di-sun) or Hokkien 李孫/李孙 (dí-sun), realized as such under Spanish orthography during the Spanish Colonial Era in the Philippines due to /l/~/d/ allophony when the proceeding vowel is either, [i], [e], or [u] in Philippine Hokkien.[1]
References
- Douglas, Carstairs (1899), “D.”, in Chinese-English Dictionary of the Vernacular or Spoken Language of Amoy, London: Presbyterian Church of England, page 99
Kapampangan
Etymology
From Hokkien 二孫/二孙 (di-sun) or Hokkien 李孫/李孙 (dí-sun), realized as such under Spanish orthography during the Spanish Colonial Era in the Philippines due to /l/~/d/ allophony when the proceeding vowel is either, [i], [e], or [u] in Philippine Hokkien.[1]
Proper noun
Dizon
- a surname from Min Nan of Chinese origin, notably borne by:
- Sunshine Dizon, actress
- Ryzza Mae Dizon, child actress and television personality
References
- Douglas, Carstairs (1899), “D.”, in Chinese-English Dictionary of the Vernacular or Spoken Language of Amoy, London: Presbyterian Church of England, page 99
Tagalog
Etymology
From Spanish Dizon, from Hokkien 二孫/二孙 (jī-sun) or Hokkien 李孫/李孙 (lí-sun), realized as such under Spanish orthography during the Spanish Colonial Era in the Philippines due to /l/~/d/ allophony when the proceeding vowel is either, [i], [e], or [u] in Philippine Hokkien.[1]
Proper noun
Dizon
- a surname from Min Nan of Chinese origin, notably borne by:
- Sunshine Dizon, actress
- Ryzza Mae Dizon, child actress and television personality
Statistics
According to data collected by Forebears in 2014, Dizon is the 15th most common surname in the Philippines, occurring in 182,703 individuals.
See also
References
- Douglas, Carstairs (1899), “D.”, in Chinese-English Dictionary of the Vernacular or Spoken Language of Amoy, London: Presbyterian Church of England, page 99