Hay Surname

4,322nd
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 130,160 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
Cambodia
Highest density in:
Cambodia

Hay Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'at the hay,' i.e. the haw or hedge, an enclosure; compare Hayward or Haward, a hedge-ward; v. Haig and Hawe. The popular form in the North of England was Haig, Haigh, and Hague.

'But right so as these holtes, and these haves, That have in winter dead been and dry.

Read More About This Surname

Hay Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Cambodia31,7721:487120
United States23,7951:15,2331,929
Australia9,9041:2,726369
Pakistan9,1961:19,4261,133
England8,6411:6,448926
Myanmar7,6831:6,760240
Scotland7,4781:71695
Canada6,5281:5,644822
France3,9381:16,8671,839
New Zealand3,0551:1,482178
Vietnam2,7761:33,374468
Indonesia1,6961:77,9778,301
Bangladesh1,2621:126,2735,065
South Africa1,1821:45,8365,853
Egypt1,0071:91,2977,912
Saudi Arabia8751:35,2645,116
Jamaica8591:3,341489
Morocco7841:43,9757,155
Mexico6081:204,1555,467
Germany5651:142,48817,219
United Arab Emirates5591:16,3901,969
Northern Ireland4461:4,137819
Sri Lanka4391:47,4005,492
India4301:1,783,87363,578
Thailand3581:197,31432,638
Wales3411:9,0751,004
Qatar3091:7,631826
Norway2621:19,6272,501
Malaysia2321:127,1308,268
Philippines2171:466,53656,377
Kuwait2021:18,8152,493
Singapore1881:29,2961,115
Iraq1681:208,4624,771
Mauritania1551:26,4182,254
Turkey1491:522,29129,341
Panama1351:28,9801,720
Denmark1251:45,1584,724
Spain1221:383,21321,260
Afghanistan1171:274,8144,496
Ireland1071:44,0093,343
Brazil1061:2,019,56964,017
Iran1061:724,36337,588
Belgium1031:111,61816,639
Hong Kong981:74,8521,406
Costa Rica891:53,7091,190
Papua New Guinea851:95,92612,852
Netherlands791:213,76228,937
Sweden791:124,6428,853
Argentina701:610,62043,172
Trinidad and Tobago671:20,3582,366
Yemen511:518,14310,800
Isle of Man401:2,146418
Switzerland401:205,32317,881
Venezuela351:862,97413,724
Dominican Republic311:336,54611,471
Israel301:285,25425,178
Italy261:2,352,18093,058
Niger241:799,66718,510
Zimbabwe241:643,26047,966
China221:62,150,9803,380
New Caledonia211:13,1533,514
Hungary201:490,81431,291
Jersey171:5,8351,193
Sudan161:2,344,3874,438
Bermuda151:4,352690
Cayman Islands131:4,915636
Taiwan131:1,803,44211,840
Lebanon101:563,70813,499
Syria91:2,144,5589,551
United States Virgin Islands91:12,2641,665
Czechia81:1,329,18491,312
Cuba71:1,646,1028,141
Finland71:785,24338,644
Nigeria71:25,306,108327,793
Falkland Islands61:522125
Poland61:6,334,792156,558
Ukraine61:7,587,116277,111
Chile51:3,523,29539,650
Tunisia51:122,12516,050
Angola41:6,747,3046,999
Austria41:2,128,85991,203
Bulgaria41:1,744,72646,837
Colombia41:11,943,51826,735
Honduras41:2,204,1106,397
Luxembourg41:145,1366,519
Madagascar41:5,912,4595,394
Malawi41:4,279,77724,060
Portugal41:2,604,56016,079
South Korea41:12,810,0642,073
Albania31:971,35222,477
Azerbaijan31:3,216,37432,290
Japan31:42,614,76459,022
Algeria21:19,315,77697,017
Armenia21:1,465,09016,492
Bahamas11:391,7512,737
Bahrain11:1,348,60810,432
Barbados11:287,4482,772
Bolivia11:10,616,43417,077
Cameroon11:20,769,068227,406
Cook Islands11:18,1791,485
Croatia11:4,228,60499,289
Cyprus11:884,87613,055
Ecuador11:15,905,84650,210
Estonia11:1,321,80440,178
Ethiopia11:97,546,26229,669
Fiji11:894,3914,568
French Polynesia11:280,8057,211
Ghana11:27,020,69223,742
Greece11:11,079,790145,225
Guernsey11:64,4392,137
Jordan11:8,842,43726,010
Kazakhstan11:17,682,496204,010
Kenya11:46,179,900103,372
Laos11:6,588,3231,961
Liechtenstein11:38,3781,726
Malta11:430,2723,380
Mauritius11:1,293,41716,552
Mozambique11:27,261,5697,432
Namibia11:2,409,40119,676
Palestine11:4,548,84918,388
Paraguay11:7,236,74616,511
Peru11:31,784,12364,452
Puerto Rico11:3,550,1399,109
Romania11:20,077,87089,414
Russia11:144,123,056881,408
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines11:112,6591,704
Senegal11:14,579,34211,705
Serbia11:7,144,94838,459
Slovakia11:5,336,450140,422
Slovenia11:2,487,67531,128
Solomon Islands11:580,02922,243
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland3831:11,5661,594
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Scotland7,4961:49980
England3,3811:7,2101,119
Wales1811:8,665533
Guernsey81:4,082713
Isle of Man61:9,045877
Jersey21:25,9413,069
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States6,2991:7,9721,021

The alternate forms: Háy (104) & Haÿ (5) are calculated separately.

Hay (49,378) may also be a first name.

Hay Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'at the hay,' i.e. the haw or hedge, an enclosure; compare Hayward or Haward, a hedge-ward; v. Haig and Hawe. The popular form in the North of England was Haig, Haigh, and Hague.

'But right so as these holtes, and these haves, That have in winter dead been and dry.': Chaucer.

Eborard de de Heys. Norfolk, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

John del Heys, Norfolk, ibid.

Nicholas de la Hay, Lincolnshire, ibid.

Robert in the Hay, Close Roll, 18 Richard II.

Ricardus del Haye, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.

Petrus del Hay, 1379: ibid.

Cecilia de la Hay, Somerset, Edward III: Kirby's Quest.

William atte Haye. Placitorum in domo capitulari Westmonasteriensi.

A Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames (1896) by Charles Wareing Endell Bardsley

A considerable number of OHG. words were introduced into Gallo-Roman speech between the eighth and tenth centuries. Among the words then introduced was haga, which we find in the Capitularies of Charles the Bald (823—877) spelled haia, the modern French hale, a hedge. By the middle of the eleventh century or earlier the word had entered into the name of a place in the arrondissement of Coutance-La Have du Puits, and so gave name to a family de la Haye. The first of the name in Scotland was probably William de Haya who obtained the lands of Herrol (Errol) in Gowrie from William the Lion c. 1178—82 (SCM., II, p. 303), and is in record as witnessing charters by Malcolm IV after 1160 and others by William the Lion c. 1170—1200 (REM., 5; LAC., p. 1; and elsewhere). In one of the charters of Malcolm he is styled pincerna or cup-bearer to the king. Another William de Haia, a churchman, clerk to Gilbert, earl of Strathern, is in record c. 1206—11 (LIM., XXV; RAA., I, 86). David de Haya was vicecomes of Forfar c. 1200—14 (RAA., I, 64). Thomas de Haya made a gift to the Hospital of Soltre c. 1202—38 (Soltre, p. 15). John de Haye witnessed a confirmation charter by Alexander II dated at Muschelbracht, 1228 (RMP., p. 215), and with Thomas de Haya witnessed a charter of the earldom of Levenax to Maldouen in the same year (Levenax, p. 2). Edmund de la Haye and Thomas de la Haye of Perthshire and Huwe de la Haye of Fife rendered homage, 1296 (Bain, II, p. 204). Thomas de Hay, lord of Lochorwirt, was a charter witness c. 1300—20 (Hay, p. 6). Of William Hay, Constable, slain at Dupplin, 1332, Boece tells us that his race would nave been extinguished had not his wife been pregnant, "an old fable often repeated in our histories" says Lord Hailes (Annals, II, p. 187). Hugo dictus Haiy held land in Ayr before 1320 (RMS., I, 43), and Thomas de Hay was one of the hostages for ransom of King David II, 1363 (Bain, IV, 81).

The Surnames of Scotland (1946) by George Fraser Black (1866-1948)

(English) Dweller at the Hedge [Old English hege] or Hedged Enclosure [Old English ge)hæg, haga] Stephen de la Haye.—Hand. Rolls. John de la Hay.—Parl. Writs.

For ther is neither busk [bush] nor hay In May that it nyl [will not] shrouded bene, And it with newe leves wrene [covered] —Chaucer, Rom. of the Rose, 54-6.

(Celtic) for O’Hay, q.v.

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

(English) Dweller at the hedge or hedged enclosure; keeper of the hedges or fences; one who came from Hayes (enclosure), a common name of minor places in England.

Dictionary of American Family Names (1956) by Elsdon Coles Smith

Anglo-Saxon haeg, French haie, a hedge, and that which it encloses-a field or park. The map of Normandy shows many localities called La Haie, and from one of these, doubtless, came, in early Norman times, if not actually at the Conquest, the family once eminent in England and still so in Scotland. The name was written De Haia and De la Hay. King Henry I. gave to Robert de Haia the lordship of Halnaker, co. Sussex, and so early as the close of the XII. cent. William de H. passed into Scotland and held the office of pincerna regis or king's butler, temp. William the Lion. From his two sons descend Hay, marquis of Tweeddale, and Hay, earl of Errol, hereditary lord high constable of Scotland. These are well-ascertained facts, but tradition assigns a different origin both to name and family. It asserts that in 980 a yeoman called John de Luz and his two sons by their prowess reinvigorated the army of Kenneth III., when they were on the point of succumbing to the Danes. They took the yokes from the oxen with which they were ploughing, and so belaboured the invaders as to drive them from the field, amidst shouts of Say! Say! The king in reward for these services gave the yeoman as much land as a falcon could fly round (the lands of Loncarty near Fife), and in memory of the event the family adopted a falcon for their crest, two husbandmen with ox-yokes for their supporters, and Hay for their surname.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

Parishes in Middlesex and Kent.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

In the reign of Kenneth II, about 980, the Danes having invaded Scotland, were encountered by that king near Loncarty in Perthshire; the Scots at first gave way and fled through a narrow pass where they were stopped by a countryman of great strength and courage, and his two sons, with no other weapons than the yokes of their ploughs, upbraiding the fugitives for their cowardice, he succeeded in rallying them, and the battle being renewed, the Danes were defeated. After the victory was obtained, the old man lying on the ground, wounded and fatigued, cried "Hay, hay," which word became the surname of his posterity, and the king, as a reward for his signal service, gave him as much land in the Carse of Gowrie, as a falcon should fly over before it settled, and a falcon being accordingly let off, flew over an extent of ground six miles in length, afterwards called Errol, and lighted on a stone, still called Falcon stone; the king also assigned three shields or escutcheons for the arms of the family, to intimate that the father and his two sons had been the three fortunate shields of Scotland.

The Origin and Signification of Scottish Surnames (1862) by Clifford Stanley Sims (1839-1896)

As Cornish names, from hay, hey, an enclosure or a churchyard. There are places named Hay in Ladock, Quethiock, and St. Breock.

Patronymica Cornu-Britannica (1870) by Richard Stephen Charnock

A hedge, an inclosure, to inclose, fence in, a protection, a place of safety. In Dutch, Haag; Saxon, Hege; German, Heck; Danish, Hekkee; Swedish, Hagn; French, Haie; Welsh, Cae; Gaelic, Ca; Cornish-British, Hoy.

"In the reign of Kenneth III. (says Douglass), about 980, the Danes having invaded Scotland, were encountered by that king, near Loncarty, in Perthshire. The Scots at first gave way, and fled through a narrow pass, where they were stopped by a countryman of great strength and courage, and his two sons, with no other weapons than the yokes of their plows. Upbraiding the fugitives for their cowardice, he succeeded in rallying them; the battle was renewed, and the Danes totally discomfited. It is said, that after the victory was obtained, the old man, lying on the ground wounded and fatigued, cried 'Say, Say, which word became the surname of his posterity. The king, as a reward for that signal service, gave him as much land in the Carse of Gowrie as a falcon should fly over before it settled; and a falcon being accordingly let off, flew over an extent of ground six miles in length, afterward called Errol, and lighted on a stone still called Falconstone or Hawkstone."

An Etymological Dictionary of Family and Christian Names (1857) by William Arthur

Or De la Haye. Richard, surnamed Turstin Halduc, the first known ancestor of this family, was probably a younger son of Turstin de Bastembourg, ancestor of the Bertrams (see Mitford), as might be inferred from several reasons. He in 1056 with Eudo his son founded Essay Abbey, Normandy, endowing it with vast and princely possessions (Gall. Christ. xi. 224 instr.). Eudo accompanied the Conqueror. He is mentioned by Wace as the ‘Sire de la Haie,’ and in 1086 was a great baron in England (Domesd.). His d. and heir m. Geoffry de Mandeville, Earl of Essex, Seneschal of Normandy in her right (Dugd. Bar. 110). Eudo had a brother Ralph, Dapifer or Seneschal to Robert Earl of Mortaine. In 1086 Ralph Dapifer held in capite in Lincoln, and from the Earl of Mortaine and Earl Alan in Northants (Domesd.). He accompanied Duke Robert to Palestine, 1096 (Des Bois). In 1105 Robert de Ilaia his son as heir confirmed the charter of Turstin Halduc and Eudo (Gall. Christ. xi. 227, Instr.); and 1105 as Robert de Haia, ‘son of Ralph the Seneschal of the E. of Mortaine’ and nephew of Hudo (Eudo) Dapifer, granted Boxgrove to Essay Abbey (Ib. 233). The confirmation charter of Henry I., 1126, recites the gifts of Turstin, Eudo, and the confirmation by Robert de Haia and his sons Richard and Ralph (Ib. 234), also the grants of Richard de Haia in Britville, Normandy (Ib. 235). Robert had issue, 1, Richard de la Haye, whose barony in Lincoln was of twenty fees, 1165, and who left coheiresses; 2, Ralph, who held a Norman barony 1165; 3, William. The latter held fiefs in Hereford, Devon, and Worcester, 1165, and held the office of Pincerna or Butler of Scotland (Douglas). From his eldest son descended the Earls of Errol, and from his younger the Marquises of Tweeddale. Many other branches of De la Hay existed in England and Scotland.

The Norman People (1874)

(Scotch), Hedge. (variant: Hawes and Haig.)

Surnames (1857) by Bernard Homer Dixon

A location name in Staffordshire.

British Family Names: Their Origin and Meaning (1903) by Henry Barber

Hay: a hedge to an enclosure; often a small park. Chaucer in “Troilus” has— “But right so as these holtes and these hayes, That have in winter dead beene and dry, Revesten them in greene when May is; When every lusty beast lusteth to pley.”

From this simple root we have the surnames Hay, Hayes, Haigh, and Hawis and Hawes, and in combination Haywood, Haworth, Haughton. As a termination it gets reduced to ay, sometimes ey - Fotheringay; Halley, the enclosure on the hillside.

Family Names And Their Story (1913) by Sabine Baring-Gould

Hay: a Norman name, from La Haye-de-Puits in Manche. “Hence came the great Eudo Dapifer,” says Sir Francis Palgrave, “who acquired, whether by force or favour, the largest proportions by robbery, called Conquest, in the counties of Sussex, Essex, and Suffolk.” William de la Hay settled in Lothian in the middle of the twelfth century, and was Chief Butler of Scotland in the reigns of Malcolm IV. and William the Lion.

Family Names And Their Story (1913) by Sabine Baring-Gould

User-submitted Reference

This surname originated in Höheinhöd, Grafschaft Hanau-Lichtenberg, Heiliges Römisches Reich. When descendants immigrated to the United States, the surname was changed to Hay. Paper trails of this surname date back to the early 1600's.

- adrienhart1

Hay Last Name Facts

Where Does The Last Name Hay Come From? nationality or country of origin

The last name Hay (Bengali: হয়, Hassaniya-Arabic: ﺍﻟﺤﻲ, Hindi: हाय, Marathi: हाय, Oriya: ହୟ) is carried by more people in Cambodia than any other country or territory. It can occur as: Háy or Haÿ. Click here to see other potential spellings of this surname.

How Common Is The Last Name Hay? popularity and diffusion

The last name Hay is the 4,322nd most frequently used last name at a global level, borne by around 1 in 55,989 people. The last name occurs mostly in Asia, where 45 percent of Hay live; 28 percent live in Southeast Asia and 24 percent live in Khmer-Asia. It is also the 18,696th most frequently used first name worldwide. It is borne by 49,378 people.

This surname is most common in Cambodia, where it is carried by 31,772 people, or 1 in 487. In Cambodia it is most prevalent in: Phnom Penh, where 12 percent are found, Kandal Province, where 11 percent are found and Kampong Cham Province, where 11 percent are found. Other than Cambodia this last name occurs in 130 countries. It also occurs in The United States, where 18 percent are found and Australia, where 8 percent are found.

Hay Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The frequency of Hay has changed over time. In The United States the number of people who held the Hay surname grew 378 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it grew 256 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Wales it grew 188 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it fell 72 percent between 1901 and 2014.

Hay Last Name Statistics demography

The religious devotion of those bearing the Hay surname is chiefly Presbyterian (58%) in Ireland and Jewish (22%) in Lebanon.

In The United States those bearing the Hay last name are 13.44% more likely to be registered with the Republican Party than the national average, with 60.21% registered to vote for the party.

The amount Hay earn in different countries varies greatly. In Norway they earn 8.79% more than the national average, earning 376,504 kr per year; in South Africa they earn 85.35% more than the national average, earning R 440,472 per year; in Colombia they earn 26.72% less than the national average, earning $16,635,500 COP per year; in United States they earn 3.39% more than the national average, earning $44,613 USD per year and in Canada they earn 5.01% more than the national average, earning $52,174 CAD per year.

Phonetically Similar Names

SurnameSimilarityWorldwide IncidencePrevalency
Háy89104/
Haÿ895/
Chay8662,567/
Hays8654,281/
Haya8630,189/
Haye8614,532/
Hayo8611,279/
Khay865,422/
Hayu863,893/
Hayd863,549/
Hayi862,901/
Hayy861,083/
Hajy86812/
Hayt86422/
Ahay86223/
Hauy86209/
Haiy86172/
Haay86140/
Hahy8621/
Hayh8615/
Hayz8613/
Hayé862/
Hayp862/
Hjay861/
Hhay861/
Ha801,653,060/
Ay80132,927/
Hy8010,472/
Hayat75714,052/
Hayes75355,769/
Chaya7511,524/
Chhay758,837/
Khaya755,394/
Chaiy754,785/
Khayi754,067/
Hayah752,729/
Hayet752,449/
Ahaya752,363/
Hauya752,352/
Hayot752,341/
Hayee752,256/
Hayoz751,850/
Hayad751,611/
Hayyi751,374/
Hayeh751,166/
Chayi751,159/
Khaye751,096/
Hayas751,086/
Hayez751,076/
Khayo751,052/
Haydt75722/
Hayou75674/
Chaye75596/
Chayo75574/
Khayy75340/
Hayaa75317/
Ahaye75281/
Hayed75220/
Haiyi75206/
Hajiy75201/
Hayaz75171/
Ahayo75142/
Hayut75133/
Chayu75124/
Hayos75124/
Hayhi75124/
Chays7593/
Chaay7592/
Khajy7589/
Khaiy7575/
Haych7574/
Chayt7555/
Hayau7552/
Hayit7550/
Hayih7548/
Hayis7545/
Hayha7538/
Hayod7537/
Hayap7535/
Khayu7524/
Hahey7520/
Chahy7516/
Hahyu7514/
Hayoo7514/
Chayé7514/
Hayus7513/
Hayup7513/
Chauy7512/
Haytt7511/
Hayie7511/
Hahya759/
Hayje758/
Ahayu757/
Hayss757/
Hayid757/
Haayt757/
Hauye756/
Hhaya755/
Hjaya755/
Hayud755/
Chayd755/
Hayst754/
Hayyt754/
Hayho753/
D'Hay753/
Hayuu753/
Ahayt753/
Chayz753/
Hayop753/
Hayoh753/
Haiyt752/
Hayij752/
Haysh752/
Haãyo752/
Haïya752/
Hayts751/
Hayds751/
Haydz751/
Hayii751/
Hayzs751/
Ha'ya751/
Hahiy751/
Ahays751/
Hayht751/
Hayuz751/
Hahay751/
Hgaya751/
Hayip751/
Hayiz751/
Hayuo751/
Hayyp751/
Heauy751/
Khaay751/
Hajyi751/
Haiiy751/
Chgay751/
Chayh751/
Hajyo751/
Hjayi751/
Aahay751/
Jhaay751/
Hahyd751/
Hajyt751/
Hayyy751/
Hjajy751/
Khgay751/
Hauhy750/
Haays750/
Hauyh750/
Hauys750/
Aye67936,658/
Cha67936,167/
Hai67421,703/
Kha67273,378/
Huy67169,619/
Haj67158,194/
Hoa67155,230/
Ayo6794,329/
Gay6788,569/
Chy6780,240/
Jay6755,828/
Hau6751,479/
Aya6750,440/
Ayu6745,498/
Hoy6732,219/
Ayi6722,534/
Has6719,866/
Hey6715,392/
Had6710,713/
Hat6710,423/
Chaiyo679,472/
Aha676,557/
Hayesh675,577/
Haz674,346/
Haß674,305/
Chhaya673,144/
Eha672,769/
Chauya672,475/
Hyd672,196/
Haa671,815/
Hap671,770/
Hah671,741/
Chayee671,626/
Hys671,520/
Ays671,496/
Hayhoe671,443/
Chayat671,409/
Ajy671,231/
Chayah671,000/
Chaaya67971/
Ayd67769/
Ayt67757/
Høy67701/
Hayash67696/
Chahyd67626/
Hea67570/
Khy67555/
Chayet67518/
Chayot67512/
Aay67474/
Hyz67449/
Khayyi67404/
Chayut67310/
Aiy67290/
Chayes67262/
Hhayaa67235/
Ohy67229/
Hyt67205/
Hahaya67204/
Hyy67199/
Chayed67197/
Hyi67197/
Ayh67176/
Chahya67166/
Ahy67156/
Ayy67156/
Chayyi67144/
Khajiy67126/
Hahych6792/
Hayosh6791/
Haş6787/
Hayatt6779/
Hyp6775/
Chahyo6773/
Hayett6768/
Hayous6761/
Hayaux6755/
Chayep6754/
Guhaya6750/
Ayz6746/
Haš6746/
Hojaya6744/
Khayee6744/
Haș6741/
Ayp6738/
Chayou6737/
Auy6734/
Hayouh6734/
Ayé6731/
Hayout6730/
Hja6730/
Hayaud6725/
Chhaye6723/
Chayas6722/
Chahay6722/
Chayii6721/
Chayie6720/
Chayad6720/
Chahey6719/
Aihaya6717/
Haahay6717/
Hayott6715/
Hiy6715/
Haahye6715/
Ouhaya6715/
Haç6715/
Hyh6714/
Hayeed6713/
Hayess6712/
Ayhaya6712/
Hayach6712/
Haï6712/
Hayeet6711/
Chhayi6710/
Chayeh6710/
Hha679/
Chayau679/
Chhauy678/
Ayj678/
Chayaz678/
Chayaa677/
Chayoo677/
Khaiyo677/
Chayid677/
Hhy677/
Khayyo676/
Chayez676/
Chayyo676/
Hauyat676/
Hayihe675/
Hayova675/
Hayush675/
Haľ675/
Hayass675/
Hhayat675/
Hjy675/
Hayadh674/
Hayhat674/
Hayodh674/
Chayap674/
Hayhes673/
Hứa673/
Hyß673/
Chaych673/
Chayod673/
Haihys673/
Hayood672/
Hayesz672/
Chhayo672/
Khajyi672/
Ahayah672/
Ayà672/
Ayè672/
Ayó672/
Chayos672/
Hahaye672/
Khayaa672/
Haî672/
Hayoud672/
Khayoo672/
Khahye672/
Hayatd672/
Hayioh672/
Chgaya671/
Chhayu671/
Chaydz671/
Chayhi671/
Chayit671/
Chaysh671/
Chayus671/
Hayaph671/
Haysch671/
Hayshp671/
Haytch671/
Jhajiy671/
Jhayha671/
Uyhaya671/
Hayich671/
Haã671/
Hayowa671/
Ahjaya671/
Hayaut671/
Haytth671/
Høa671/
Hayeez671/
Hayiss671/
Hayoth671/
Hayová671/
Hayadt671/
Hayaia671/
Hayyth671/
Hać671/
Heiaya671/
Khaïyi671/
Khayyh671/
Ahhaya671/
Ahaaye671/
D'Haye671/
Aïy671/
Ayò671/
Chayht671/
Khoaya671/
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Chayje671/
Haahya671/
Uhy671/
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Chaiyp671/
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Hay Name Transliterations

TransliterationICU LatinPercentage of Incidence
Hay in the Oriya language
ହୟhaya-
Hay in the Marathi language
हायhaya75
हयhaya25
Hay in the Hassaniya-Arabic language
ﺍﻟﺤﻲalhy68.12
ﺣﻲhy27.54
ﺍﻟﺤﻰalhy1.45
ﻫﻲhy1.45
ﺣﻴﻪhyh1.45
Hay in the Bengali language
হয়haya66.67
হৈয়haiya22.22
হায়haya11.11
Hay in the Hindi language
हायhaya57.14
हयhaya35.71
हयाhaya7.14

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Hay Reference & Research

Hay FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.

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Footnotes

  • Surnames are taken as the first part of an person's inherited family name, caste, clan name or in some cases patronymic
  • Descriptions may contain details on the name's etymology, origin, ethnicity and history. They are largely reproduced from 3rd party sources; diligence is advised on accepting their validity - more information
  • Name distribution statistics are generated from a global database of over 4 billion people - more information
  • Heatmap: Dark red means there is a higher occurrence of the name, transitioning to light yellow signifies a progressively lower occurrence. Clicking on selected countries will show mapping at a regional level
  • Rank: Name are ranked by incidence using the ordinal ranking method; the name that occurs the most is assigned a rank of 1; name that occur less frequently receive an incremented rank; if two or more name occur the same number of times they are assigned the same rank and successive rank is incremented by the total preceeding names
  • Ethnic group cannot necessarily be determined by geographic occurrence
  • Similar: Names listed in the "Similar" section are phonetically similar and may not have any relation to Hay
  • To find out more about this surname's family history, lookup records on Family​Search, My​Heritage, FindMyPast and Ancestry. Further information may be obtained by DNA analysis