Recent Matching
WhitePages members

Inconceivable! There are no WhitePages members with the name Mary New.

More WhitePages members

Add your member listing

Mary in the US

  1. #2 Michael
  2. #3 James
  3. #4 Robert
  4. #5 David
  5. #6 Mary
  6. #7 William
  7. #8 Richard
  8. #9 Thomas
  9. #10 Jennifer

New in the US

  1. #2,576 Carbajal
  2. #2,577 Looney
  3. #2,578 Schell
  4. #2,579 Babb
  5. #2,580 New
  6. #2,581 Bolin
  7. #2,582 Tobias
  8. #2,583 Beaty
  9. #2,584 Salisbury

Mary New in the US

  1. #156,631 Mary Forrester
  2. #156,632 Mary Hartnett
  3. #156,633 Mary Kenyon
  4. #156,634 Mary Mckeon
  5. #156,635 Mary New
  6. #156,636 Mary Plunkett
  7. #156,637 Mary Sisk
  8. #156,638 Mary Still
  9. #156,639 Mary Templeton
HOME DISCOVER ABOUT
160
people in the U.S. have this name Get contact details for people named Mary New

Meaning & Origins

Originally a Middle English Anglicized form of French Marie, from Latin Maria. This is a New Testament form of Miriam, which St Jerome derives from elements meaning ‘drop of the sea’ (Latin stilla maris, later altered by folk etymology to stella maris ‘star of the sea’). Mary was the name of the Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus Christ, who has been the subject of a cult from earliest times. Consequently, the name was extremely common among early Christians, several saints among them, and by the Middle Ages was well established in every country in Europe at every level of society. It has been in use ever since, its popularity in England having been relatively undisturbed by vagaries of fashion until the 1960s, when it began to decline sharply. In the New Testament, Mary is also the name of several other women: Mary Magdalene (see Madeleine); Mary the sister of Martha, who sat at Jesus's feet while Martha served (Luke 10:38–42; John 11:1–46; 12:1–9) and who came to be taken in Christian tradition as symbolizing the value of a contemplative life; the mother of St Mark (Colossians 4:10); and a Roman matron mentioned by St Paul (Romans 16:6).
6th in the U.S. for 2011
New
English: nickname for a newcomer to an area, from Middle English newe ‘new’.
2,580th in the U.S. for 2011

Nicknames & variations

Top state populations

U.S. Distribution Map

Mary New is most likely to live in Texas, Florida, Kentucky, Ohio, and North Carolina

Comments