Dinkins is a comparatively rare surname. There are varying accounts as to the origin and early history of the Dinkins family. Leading researchers disagree as to whether the family is a variant of the Irish name "Duncan" from the Gaelic "Ó Duinnchinn". This particular theory seems unlikely as Irish settlers were most often Catholic while the early Dinkins family were staunchly Protestant. The more commonly accepted history of the name explains it as descending from "Dene", the Old English root word for the English name "Dean", which means "small valley, a home site". This theory holds that the
Dinkins is a comparatively rare surname. There are varying accounts as to the origin and early history of the Dinkins family. Leading researchers disagree as to whether the family is a variant of the Irish name "Duncan" from the Gaelic "Ó Duinnchinn". This particular theory seems unlikely as Irish settlers were most often Catholic while the early Dinkins family were staunchly Protestant. The more commonly accepted history of the name explains it as descending from "Dene", the Old English root word for the English name "Dean", which means "small valley, a home site". This theory holds that the family originated in Wales circa 1500 and moved into the lowlands of Scotland and then on to Londonderry in the north of Ireland. The ending "-kins" on a name would indicate "son of" and would make the name "Denekin". Dinkins would then be the Americanized form of the name.
== Early history == The earliest members of the Dinkins family to appear in British America in public records lived in the south of Virginia in the late 17th century, long before the immigration of the fabled Dinkins brothers and cousins to Charleston, South Carolina in 1717.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).