Joan Tommas

in the US

Top cities for this name

  1. Monroeville, OH (2)
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Ranking in the US

NameRank
Joan 99
Tommas 217,403
Joan Tommas 17,432,724
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  1. is 95th most common Joe
  2. is 96th most common Catherine
  3. is 97th most common Cheryl
  4. is 98th most common Roger
  5. is 99th most common Joan
  6. is 100th most common Gerald
  7. is 101st most common Virginia
  8. is 102nd most common Keith
  9. is 103rd most common Martha
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  1. is 217,399th most common Toldson
  2. is 217,400th most common Tomaschko
  3. is 217,401st most common Tomczewski
  4. is 217,402nd most common Tomines
  5. is 217,403rd most common Tommas
  6. is 217,404th most common Tomono
  7. is 217,405th most common Toncar
  8. is 217,406th most common Tonglet
  9. is 217,407th most common Tordeur
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  1. is 17,432,720th most common Joan Tomkins
  2. is 17,432,721st most common Joan Tomkowiak
  3. is 17,432,722nd most common Joan Tomlan
  4. is 17,432,723rd most common Joan Tommaney
  5. is 17,432,724th most common Joan Tommas
  6. is 17,432,725th most common Joan Tomme
  7. is 17,432,726th most common Joan Tomminelli
  8. is 17,432,727th most common Joan Tomnitz
  9. is 17,432,728th most common Joan Tomolonis

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Joan

Meaning & History

Tommas

(female) Contracted form of Old French Jo(h)anne, from Latin Io(h)anna (see Joanna). In England this was the usual feminine form of John from the Middle English period onwards and was extremely popular, but in the 16th and 17th centuries it steadily lost ground to Jane. It was strongly revived in the first part of the 20th century, partly under the influence of George Bernard Shaw's play St Joan (1923), based on the life of Joan of Arc (141231). Claiming to be guided by the voices of the saints, she persuaded the French dauphin to defy the occupying English forces and have himself crowned, and she led the French army that raised the siege of Orleans in 1429. The following year she was captured by the Burgundians and sold to the English, and a year later she was burned at the stake for witchcraft at the age of 18 or 19. Her story has captured the imagination of many writers, and she is variously portrayed as a national and political hero, a model of apolitical straightforwardness and honesty, and a religious heroine. She was canonized in 1920. More recent influences have included the American film actress Joan Crawford (190877, born Lucille le Sueur), the British actress Joan Collins (b. 1933), the American comedienne Joan Rivers (b. 1933), and the West Indian pop singer Joan Armatrading (b. 1950).

Pet forms: Joanie, Joni.

Cognates: Irish: Siobhán. Scottish Gaelic: Siubhan. See also Jane.

Source: Current searches and listings for US adults on WhitePages. (nv1)

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