Jackson

English

Etymology

From Jack + -son.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈdʒæksən/

Proper noun

Jackson

  1. A British patronymic surname.
  2. A male given name transferred from the surname.
    • 2004 Kate Atkinson, Case Histories, →ISBN pages 158:
      Francis was named for his mother's father and Jackson himself was named for his father's mother. Not that his grandmother was called Jackson, of course - it was a maiden name (Margaret Jackson) and it was a Scottish tradition, his father informed him.
  3. A metonym for a person
    1. Andrew Jackson, President of the United States (1829–1837).
    2. Michael Jackson, singer and entertainer (1958–2009).
  4. A placename
    1. A town in Queensland, Australia.
    2. A locale in the United States of America.
      1. The capital city of the state of Mississippi, and one of the two county seats of Hinds County.
      2. A city in Alabama.
      3. A city in California, and the county seat of Amador County.
      4. A city in the U.S. state of Georgia, and the county seat of Butts County.
      5. A city in Kentucky, and the county seat of Breathitt County.
      6. A town in Louisiana.
      7. A town in Maine.
      8. A city in Michigan, and the county seat of Jackson County.
      9. A city in Minnesota, and the county seat of Jackson County.
      10. A city in Missouri, and the county seat of Cape Girardeau County.
      11. A village in Nebraska.
      12. A town in New Hampshire.
      13. A town in New York.
      14. A town in North Carolina, and the county seat of Northampton County.
      15. A city in Ohio, and the county seat of Jackson County.
      16. A town in South Carolina.
      17. A city in Tennessee, and the county seat of Madison County.
      18. Any of three towns in Wisconsin.
      19. A town in Wyoming, and the county seat of Teton County.

Derived terms

Noun

Jackson (plural Jacksons)

  1. (US) A U.S. 20-dollar banknote USD. (from the portrait of President Andrew Jackson on the bill)
    • 1955, Ray Charles, Greenbacks
      She looked at me with that familiar desire
      Her eyes lit up like they were on fire
      She said, "My name's Flo, and you're on the right track,
      But look here, daddy, I wear furs on my back,
      So if you want to have fun in this man's land,
      Let Lincoln and Jackson start shaking hands."

Translations

Statistics

  • According to the 2010 United States Census, Jackson is the 19th most common surname in the United States, belonging to 708,099 individuals. Jackson is most common among Black/African American (53.0%) and White (39.9%) individuals.

Anagrams


Cebuano

Etymology

From English Jackson.

Proper noun

Jackson

  1. a male given name

Hungarian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈd͡ʒɛkson]
  • Hyphenation: Jack‧son

Proper noun

Jackson

  1. Jackson

Declension

Inflection (stem in -o-, back harmony)
singular plural
nominative Jackson Jacksonok
accusative Jacksont Jacksonokat
dative Jacksonnak Jacksonoknak
instrumental Jacksonnal Jacksonokkal
causal-final Jacksonért Jacksonokért
translative Jacksonná Jacksonokká
terminative Jacksonig Jacksonokig
essive-formal Jacksonként Jacksonokként
essive-modal
inessive Jacksonban Jacksonokban
superessive Jacksonon Jacksonokon
adessive Jacksonnál Jacksonoknál
illative Jacksonba Jacksonokba
sublative Jacksonra Jacksonokra
allative Jacksonhoz Jacksonokhoz
elative Jacksonból Jacksonokból
delative Jacksonról Jacksonokról
ablative Jacksontól Jacksonoktól
Possessive forms of Jackson
possessor single possession multiple possessions
1st person sing. Jacksonom Jacksonjaim
2nd person sing. Jacksonod Jacksonjaid
3rd person sing. Jacksonja Jacksonjai
1st person plural Jacksonunk Jacksonjaink
2nd person plural Jacksonotok Jacksonjaitok
3rd person plural Jacksonjuk Jacksonjaik
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