- Walloon name
Since
Belgium has three national languages — Dutch, French and German — Belgian names are similar to those in the neighbouring countries: the Netherlands, France and Germany. Thanks to this multiculturalism, Belgium has one of the highest number of surnames in the world (no less than 190,000 at the last count), and certainly the highest per capita ratio, about 1 family name for 53 people.Fact|date=February 2007 Place names (regions, towns, villages, hamlets) with a particle meaning "from" ("de" in French, "del" in Walloon, or "van" in Dutch) are the most numerous. An uncapitalised particle sometimes indicates nobility.For French family names among the
Walloon s and other francophones of Belgium, see below.The twenty most common French surnames in Belgium are respectively "Dubois", "Lambert", "Dupont", "Martin", "Dumont", "Leroy", "Leclercq", "Simon", "Laurent", "François", "Denis", "Renard", "Thomas", "Lejeune", "Gérard", "Petit", "Mathieu", "Lemaire", "Charlier", and "Bertrand". [http://www.statbel.fgov.be/figures/d21a_fr.asp Sources]
Some surnames have an unclear origin, like "
Berger ", meaning "shepherd " in French, and "mountainer" in Dutch and German.There are also a lot of typical Walloon surnames, like Monami (fr: "Mon ami", en: "My friend"), Dehasse (fr: "de Hasselt", en: "from
Hasselt "), Delcroix (fr: "de la Croix", en: "from theCross "), Delhaize or Donnay (some famous tennis equipments in the 80ties).Crossed etymologies can even be found, like "Deflandre" (meaning in French "from
Flanders ") or Dehasse (fr: "de Hasselt", en: "fromHasselt ", inFlemish Region ).
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