Dent (surname)

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Pronunciation/dɛnt/
LanguageEnglish
LanguagesOld English; Old French
Word/nameHabitational (from Dent, Yorkshire/Cumbria) or descriptive nickname (Old French *dent*, "tooth")
Dent
Pronunciation/dɛnt/
LanguageEnglish
Origin
LanguagesOld English; Old French
Word/nameHabitational (from Dent, Yorkshire/Cumbria) or descriptive nickname (Old French *dent*, "tooth")
MeaningFrom a valley; or "tooth"
Region of originEngland with diaspora to United States, Australia, etc.
Other names
Variant formsDente, Dentt, Dente, Dentith, Dennett

Dent is an English surname with two primary origins: a habitational name from places called Dent in Yorkshire and Cumbria, and a nickname derived from the Old French word dent meaning "tooth".

The surname most likely originates as a locational name from the villages of Dent in West Yorkshire and Cumberland—recorded circa 1200 as "Denet" and "Dinet"—from a British hill-name akin to Old Irish dinn/dind ("hill") and Old Norse tindr ("point, crag").[1][2] Alternatively, it may have arisen as a medieval nickname for someone notable for their teeth, from Old French *dent* (tooth).[3]

Geographic distribution

As of recent data, approximately 40,600 people worldwide bear the surname Dent, with the greatest numbers in the United States, followed by England and Australia.[4] In the UK, around 11,300 individuals bear the name, ranking it the 929th most common surname.[5] U.S. census data shows the number rose from about 14,082 in 2000 to 14,873 in 2010, though the per-capita incidence dipped slightly.[6]

Notable individuals

A non-exhaustive list of notable people with the surname includes:

Fictional characters

See also

References

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