Thoms Surname

37,678th
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 13,978 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
Germany
Highest density in:
Germany

Thoms Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor, 'the son of Thomas.' Thomas or Thome (whence Tom) was a universal favourite. The 13th and 14th century registers teem with it; v. Tomlin, Tomlinson, Thomson, Thompson, Tomkins, Tomkinson, Tombs, &c.

Read More About This Surname

Thoms Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Germany5,6491:14,2511,854
United States4,8401:74,8888,595
Canada9431:39,0734,899
England5111:109,03711,327
Australia4561:59,2017,179
Scotland2141:25,0182,743
Saudi Arabia1991:155,05422,057
New Zealand1841:24,6104,301
India1721:4,459,682116,397
Denmark871:64,8826,521
South Africa641:846,52756,162
Poland581:655,32357,058
Netherlands571:296,26635,624
Jamaica561:51,2492,953
Nigeria561:3,163,26496,723
Brazil551:3,892,261106,836
Singapore511:107,9944,447
Sweden481:205,14114,201
Chile301:587,21614,299
Switzerland291:283,20422,806
DR Congo271:2,736,280122,818
Wales221:140,66110,115
Spain121:3,896,00372,236
Panama121:326,0227,351
Pakistan121:14,886,99061,272
Liberia121:367,37819,503
Papua New Guinea111:741,24783,447
Paraguay111:657,8867,708
Argentina111:3,885,765145,016
Qatar91:262,00030,726
Malaysia61:4,915,704170,578
Costa Rica51:956,0146,058
Italy41:15,289,172132,955
Russia41:36,030,764577,589
Norway41:1,285,57269,185
Egypt41:22,983,93862,368
Fiji41:223,5982,635
Sri Lanka41:5,202,14012,146
Belgium31:3,832,215117,288
Indonesia31:44,083,065698,220
Austria21:4,257,71899,224
Tanzania21:26,470,806111,653
United Arab Emirates21:4,581,13693,443
Northern Ireland21:922,51818,701
China21:683,660,78330,601
Ivory Coast21:11,535,61661,806
Namibia21:1,204,70016,113
France21:33,211,361423,184
Tunisia11:610,62630,336
Japan11:127,844,29373,547
Israel11:8,557,634182,558
Ireland11:4,708,93929,543
Niger11:19,192,017110,060
Hong Kong11:7,335,48316,643
Bosnia and Herzegovina11:3,536,40219,532
Venezuela11:30,204,07785,459
Uruguay11:3,431,75838,295
Bangladesh11:159,356,77326,077
Turkey11:77,821,422191,047
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines11:112,6591,704
Trinidad and Tobago11:1,363,97522,013
Philippines11:101,238,223404,861
Tajikistan11:8,386,69212,859
Czechia11:10,633,469206,023
Dominican Republic11:10,432,93236,508
Estonia11:1,321,80440,178
Portugal11:10,418,24125,048
El Salvador11:6,343,8888,415
Botswana11:2,186,92930,250
Saint Kitts and Nevis11:55,1991,294
Bermuda11:65,2793,010
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland31:1,476,62229,385
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Scotland2771:13,5131,568
England2481:98,2889,980
Wales101:156,8426,008
Guernsey31:10,8851,562
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States6241:80,4798,473

The alternate forms: Ťhomś (1) are calculated separately.

Thoms (3,391) may also be a first name.

Thoms Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor, 'the son of Thomas.' Thomas or Thome (whence Tom) was a universal favourite. The 13th and 14th century registers teem with it; v. Tomlin, Tomlinson, Thomson, Thompson, Tomkins, Tomkinson, Tombs, &c. (a) Bapt. 'the son of Thomasin' (q.v). The two have become mixed.

Roger fil. Thomas, Cambridgeshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Richard Thomas, Suffolk, ibid.

Walter Thomas, Wiltshire, ibid.

William Thomas, Somerset, 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.

Adam Thomasson, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.

Johannes Thomasson, 1379: ibid.

1582. Married — Thomas Bryse and Alyce Thomas: St. Michael, Cornhill.

— John Thome and Anne Thomasyne, widow: Marriage Lic. (London).

1801. Married — Thomas Wyatt and Nancy Thomason: St. George, Hanover Square.

1806. — John Baptiste Thomesin and Jane Prin: ibid.

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

This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Thomas,' from the nick. Thom (later on Tom), and genitive Thoms. Hence Thomson, v. Thom.

John Thoms, Somerset, 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.

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

A common Anglo-Norman personal name. It is from the Syriac te-oma', Heb, to'am 'twin,' rendered by Greek Didymus in St. John, XI: 16. In Gaelic it assumes the forms Tómar Támhus, hence the Gaelic patronymics Mactavish, Maccombie, and Macomie, which see. As a surname in Scotland it is of late introduction from England. Thomas filius Maldoueny attested a deed of middle of thirteenth century (Neubotle, p. 27).

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

'Son of Thomas,' from the diminutive Thom. It is also an Anglicizing of Macthomas, which see. "Adam M'Intosh, son of William, the seventh chief of the Clan M'Intosh, was the founder of that branch of the clan which afterwards came to be known by the surname of M'Thomas, son of Thomas, which in time became corrupted to M'Thomie, M'Homie, M'Omie, M'Comie, and latterly M'Combie and Thoms" (Memoirs of the families of M'Combie and Thoms, p. 5). Robert M'Thomas, cousin to Robert M'Combie, became plain Robert Thomas; George Thomas, his grandson, was father of Patrick Hunter Thoms, which is the form now used by that branch of the family (ibid, p. 170,171). Thowmis, Thowms, Thownis.

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

Thom’s (Son), Thom’s Son, v. Thom,Thomas.

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

The Christian name. Though not used here prior to the Norman Conquest, this has become one of the commonest of baptismal appellatives and surnames. It has also been a most abundant source of derivatives and nicknames, represented in our family nomenclature by Thomason, Thomerson, Thomson, Thompson, Tompson, Thom, Thoms, Toms, Thomaset, Thomsett, Tomset, Tompsett, Tomkin, Tompkins, Tomkinson, Thompkisson, Thomlin, Tomlin, Tomlins, Thomlinson, Tomlinson. In the North, A commonly replaces O, and hence Thampsett, Tampsett, Tamlyn, Tamplin, and probably Taplin.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

AP THOMAS: (Welsh.) The son of Thomas.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

(Hebrew.) A twin.

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

An abbreviation of Thomas; Tom, local, Gaelic and Welsh, a round hillock or knoll, a rising ground, an eminence, any round heap, a tumulus.

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

Thomas. —The great home of this name is in Wales, more especially in South Wales, whence the name has spread in numbers into the adjacent English county of Monmouthshire, and to a less extent into Herefordshire and Shropshire. In the English counties forming the next line, it has, if we exclude Gloucestershire, obtained but little hold. Its further advance into England has been on a small scale, and it is probable that its isolated occurrence in the distant counties of Essex, Yorkshire, etc., may be explained on independent grounds. It has, however, a secondary but evidently an original home in Cornwall, where the name abounds.

Homes of Family Names in Great Britain (1890) by Henry Brougham Guppy

The surnames Thomas and Thompson both derive from the first name Thomas. The first name is one of the most ancient still in popular use, deriving from the ancient Aramaic where it meant ‘twin’. Its popularity in Western Europe stems from the Apostle of the same name, though in fact his real first name was Judas, and Thomas was only his nickname (given to distinguish him from Judas Iscariot).

In early days Thomas was not one of the great popular names, largely because of its link with ‘Doubting Thomas’-an unwise connotation in times when heretics were drawn and quartered. However, the fortunes of this name revived in England after 1170, when Thomas a Becket (who was later canonised) was murdered in Canterbury Cathedral at the instigation of his erstwhile friend, King Henry II. In fact, there are two other English St Thomas’s-St Thomas of Hereford, and Sir Thomas More (the hero of A Man for all Seasons) who was executed by King Henry VIII for refusing to admit the King as head of the Church.

The first name Thomas soon became the most popular in the land-witness its use in the phrase ‘every Tom, Dick and Harry’. It also became synonymous for anything male (thus we get the words Tomcat and Tomboy) and to this day it is the popular name for an English soldier (Tommie).

The first name Thomas, besides giving rise to the identical surname, also gave rise to many derivations from nicknames and variations. Thus we get Tomkin, which gave rise to Tomkins and Tomkinson. It is easy to see (in terms of English pronunciation) how the middle ‘p’ crept into these variant surnames-as in Thompkins. This also accounts for the ‘p’ in Thompson. Scottish pronunciation did not find a need for the intrusive ‘p’ and consequently we find the spelling Thom­son chiefly in Scotland.

The first name Thomas appears frequently in the Domesday Book, but it is nearly 200 years before we find the first use of the name as a surname. This is in the Hundred Rolls for Wiltshire in 1275, where one Walter Thomas is mentioned. Early in the next century the first Thompsons start appearing in the records. The first mention of the Scottish variation is in the records for Carrick in 1318, where one John Thomson is listed.

Scottish engineer Robert William Thomson was well ahead of his time. In 1845 he patented the pneumatic tyre, but nearly 50 years passed before Dunlop revived his invention for use in bicycles.

Newspaper magnate Roy Thomson (1894—1978), first Baron of Fleet, was the Canadian-born owner of the world’s largest publishing empire. In 1953 he moved to the UK and successively bought The Scotsman, The Sunday Times and The Times itself.

Scottish biologist Sir Charles Wyville Thomson (1830—82) led the famous Challenger expedition, the first important attempt at deep-sea exploration (1872—76). He discovered many life forms previously believed extinct, sometimes as far down as 650 fathoms.

The deadly Thompson sub-machine gun (popularly known as the ‘Tommy Gun’) was the co-invention of American Army engineer John Taliaferro Thompson (1860—1940).

Sir Benjamin Thompson (1753—1814), later Count Rumford, was a physicist, administrator and founder of the Royal Institution of Great Britain. His contributions to society include the cultivation of the potato, the invention of the kitchen range and a drip coffee pot, and the exposition of ‘Count Rumford’s Principle’ concerning the cure of smoking chimneys.

M. Thomson was one of over fifty pseudonyms used by the French writer and philosopher, Francois Marie Arouet, better known as Voltaire.

The youngest recorded university entrant was William Thomson, later Lord Kelvin, who entered Glasgow University in October 1834, aged 10 years, 4 months.

The English geologist Herbert Henry Thomas (1876—1935) established that the bluestones at Stonehenge had been transported 200 miles from the Prescelly Mountains in Wales where they had been quarried.

Physicist Sir Joseph John Thomson (1856—1940) established in 1897 that cathode rays were moving particles, later called electrons. This led to the discovery of isotopes and a greater understanding of atomic structure.

The world is full of Thomas/Thomson/Thompson-related places and geographic features. The United Kingdom alone has 21 towns ranging from Tomatin to Thomshill. Canada has 5 towns, the United States 28, Australia 3 and South Africa 2. Other places are spread all over the earth from Tomas Barron in Bolivia to Thomson Village in Singapore. Name-related lakes, rivers, mountains and islands are also common.

With about 245,000 namesakes Thomas is the 8th most popular surname in England and Wales, while with 190,000 Thompson ranks as 15th. (Thomas is not common enough throughout Scotland to be counted separately.) Thomson has about 42,000 namesakes which makes it Scotland’s 5th most popular surname. Thomas is notably popular in and around Cardiff where an estimated one in about 45 families bears the name, while Thompson’s most popular area is Teesside where one in 140 families is so named. Around the world Thomas’s and Thompsons (with or without the middle ‘p ’) are most common in Wellington (one in 191 families), while Melbourne and Sydney tie for second place with one in 210. The United States has an estimated total of just under 722,000 Thomas’s which makes this their 11th most popular surname, and just over 667,000 Thompsons which makes this their 16th most popular surname. Combined, they are in 6th place.

— Peter Verstappen

Thoms Last Name Facts

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

Thoms (Hindi: थोमस, Marathi: थॉ) is most common in Germany. It may be rendered as a variant: Ťhomś. For other possible spellings of this name click here.

How Common Is The Last Name Thoms? popularity and diffusion

It is the 37,678th most commonly held surname on a global scale, held by approximately 1 in 521,358 people. This surname occurs mostly in Europe, where 48 percent of Thoms are found; 41 percent are found in North America and 41 percent are found in Anglo-North America. It is also the 122,338th most widely held given name on earth. It is borne by 3,391 people.

Thoms is most numerous in Germany, where it is carried by 5,649 people, or 1 in 14,251. In Germany it is mostly concentrated in: Schleswig-Holstein, where 21 percent live, North Rhine-Westphalia, where 19 percent live and Lower Saxony, where 12 percent live. Other than Germany this surname occurs in 70 countries. It is also found in The United States, where 35 percent live and Canada, where 7 percent live.

Thoms Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The occurrence of Thoms has changed through the years. In The United States the number of people bearing the Thoms surname increased 776 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it increased 206 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it decreased 23 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Wales it increased 220 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it decreased 67 percent between 1901 and 2014.

Thoms Last Name Statistics demography

The religious adherence of those carrying the surname is principally Anglican (100%) in Ireland.

In The United States those bearing the Thoms last name are 11.25% more likely to be registered with the Republican Party than The US average, with 58.02% registered with the political party.

The amount Thoms earn in different countries varies markedly. In Norway they earn 33.26% less than the national average, earning 230,972 kr per year; in South Africa they earn 12.46% more than the national average, earning R 267,252 per year; in United States they earn 3.3% more than the national average, earning $44,571 USD per year and in Canada they earn 6.81% more than the national average, earning $53,066 CAD per year.

Phonetically Similar Names

SurnameSimilarityWorldwide IncidencePrevalency
Thomse91193/
Thomss9113/
Thomms914/
Thoems913/
Thoums913/
Thomsp911/
Thomsh911/
Thooms910/
Toms8918,745/
Ťhomś871/
Thomsch8312/
Thams80805/
Tooms80427/
Tomse80185/
Tomms8068/
Thems8045/
Tohms8024/
Ttoms8018/
Toums804/
Thomz803/
Tahms803/
Toims801/
Toems801/
Tom's801/
Thomsová771/
Tomshe7321/
Thamse7316/
Toomse7315/
Tomsch738/
Toumse732/
Thamsh731/
Thasms731/
Thaems731/
Thamms731/
Theems731/
Tams673,490/
Tomsová67664/
Tomsche67264/
Tems67207/
Tomz67111/
Tomsova6754/
Tomš677/

Thoms Name Transliterations

TransliterationICU LatinPercentage of Incidence
Thoms in the Marathi language
थॉtho76.27
थॉमसthomasa12.71
थोtho7.63
Thoms in the Hindi language
थोमसthomasa63.49
थोम्सthomsa20.63
थॉमसthomasa12.7
थॉम्सthomsa1.59

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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 Thoms
  • 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