Thanks Charlie,

That was a good explanation.



Mary in AZ

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From: Charles W Aubin [mailto:cwaub...@telus.net]
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2010 2:20 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG]



Hi Charles:

 The following is the explanation from about genealogy.



  Hope this helps, Charlie Aubin


Understanding Dit names


Tuesday July 14, 2009

Found primarily in France, New France (French-Canada, Louisiana, etc.), and 
Scotland, dit names are essentially an alias tacked on to a family name or 
surname. Dit in French is a form of the word dire, which means "to say," and in 
the case of dit names is translated loosely as "that is to say," or "called." 
Therefore, the first name is the family's original surname, passed down to them 
by an ancestor, while the "dit" name is the name the person/family is actually 
called or known as. Dit names are used by families, not specific individuals, 
and are usually passed down to future generations, either in place of the 
orginal surname, or in addition to it.

Why a dit name? Dit names were often adopted by families to distinguish them 
from another branch of the same family. Interestingly, many dit 
<http://www.histori.ca/prodev/article.do;jsessionid=99CC289EF7487A2AD82B6DED619FA34B.tomcat1?id=15346>
  names derived from military service, where early French military rules 
required a nom de guerre, or nickname, for all regular soldiers. The specific 
dit name may have been chosen for many of the same reasons as the original 
surname - as a nickname based on trade or physical characteristics, to identify 
the ancestral place of origin (Andre Jarret de Beauregard, where Beauregard 
refers to the ancestral home in the French province of Dauphine), etc.

A dit name can be legally used to replace the family's original surname, so you 
may find an individual listed with a dit name, or under either the original 
surname or the dit name. Dit names may also be found reversed with the original 
surname, or as hyphenated surnames.

*       Hudon dit Beaulieu
*       Beaulieu dit Hudon
*       Hudon Beaulieu
*       Beaulieu Hudon
*       Hudon-Beaulieu
*       Beaulieu-Hudon
*       Hudon
*       Beaulieu

When recording a dit name in your family tree software, it is generally 
standard practice to record it in its most common form - e.g. Hudon dit 
Beaulieu. A standardized list of dit names with their common variants can be 
found in Rene Jette's Répertoire des Noms de Famille du Québec" des Origines à 
1825 and Msgr Cyprien Tanguay's Dictionnaire genealogique des familles 
canadiennes (Volume 7). Another extensive source is The dit Name: French 
Canadian Surnames, Aliases, Adulterations, and Anglicizations by Robert J. 
Quentin. When the name is not found in one of the above sources, you can use a 
phone book (Québec City or Montréal) to select the most common form, or just 
record it in the form most often used by your ancestors.

----- Original Message -----

From: Charles Apple <mailto:apple1...@embarqmail.com>

To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com

Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2010 12:43 PM

Subject: RE: [LegacyUG]



Excuse my ignorance, but, what is a dit name?



Charles



  _____

From: Lee Martin [mailto:equinephi...@yahoo.com]
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2010 9:31 AM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: [LegacyUG]

How does one record dit names?  I have French and Canadian-French ancestry plus 
Quebec church records showing the dit names.



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