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	This well-known English name is in Ireland since the fourteenth 
century and is now quite numerous in Dublin.  It is usually of the nickname 
type.  In Irish the form Aboíd is used.  Woulfe states that Abbott (a common 
Anglo-Irish surname) is a derivative of Abraham;  but Reaney gives it its 
obvious meaning, adding that such surnames often originated as nicknames. 
  
GLOSSARY
| Clan | 
From the Gaelic clann which means literally 
'children'. | 
 
| Mac- | 
From the Gaelic mac, meaning 'son' | 
 
| O' | 
From the Gaelic Ó, meaning 'grandson', 
'grandchild' or 'descendant'; Ní is the femine form of Ó, meaning 'daughter' or 
'descendant' | 
 
| Plantation (Ulster) | 
The redistribution of escheated lands after the 
defeat of the Ulster Gaelic lords and the 'Flight of the Earls' in 1607.  Only 
counties Donegal, Derry, Tyrone, Armagh, Fermanagh and Cavan were actually 
'planted', portions of land there being distributed to English and Scottish 
families on their lands and for the building of bawns. | 
 
| Sept | 
A family group of shared ancestry living in the 
same locality | 
 
| Undertakers | 
Powerful English or Scottish landowners who 
undertook the plantation of British settlers on the lands they were granted. | 
 
| Gaelic | 
This word in Ireland has no relation to 
Scotland.  As a noun it is used to denote the Irish language, as an adjective to 
denote native Irish as opposed to Norman or English origin. | 
 
| Erenagh | 
From the Irish Gaelic airchinneach, meaning 
'hereditary steward of church lands'.  A family would hold the ecclesiastical 
office and the right to the church or monastery lands, the incumbent at any one 
time being the erenagh. | 
 
 
  
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