Morin is a surname of different Romance origins. In northern Italy it derives from the Ladin term for «mill» (molina in Latin). In French it derives from the ancient Celtic tribe of Morini who once inhabited the coast of modern day Belgium. The Gaulish ethnonym Morini (sing. Morinos) literally means 'those of the sea', that is to say the 'sea people' or the 'sailors'. It stems from Proto-Celtic *mori 'sea'. It may also refer to:
Morin is a surname of different Romance origins. In northern Italy it derives from the Ladin term for «mill» (molina in Latin). In French it derives from the ancient Celtic tribe of Morini who once inhabited the coast of modern day Belgium. The Gaulish ethnonym Morini (sing. Morinos) literally means 'those of the sea', that is to say the 'sea people' or the 'sailors'. It stems from Proto-Celtic *mori 'sea'. It may also refer to:
==People== ===Canada=== Albertine Morin-Labrecque (1886–1957) Canadian pianist Augustin-Norbert Morin (1803–1865), lawyer, judge and politician, joint Premier of the Province of Canada Blain Morin, Canadian politician and labour union organizer Claude Morin (ADQ politician) (born 1953), Canadian politician Claude Morin (PQ politician) (born 1929), Canadian politician Gérard-Raymond Morin (1940–2024), Canadian politician Gilles Morin (born 1931), Canadian politician in Ontario Guy Paul Morin, Canadian wrongfully convicted of a 1984 murder Jacques-Yvan Morin (1931–2023), Canadian politician in Quebec Jean-Baptiste Morin (politician) (1840–1911), Canadian politician Karl Morin-Strom (also Karl Strom) (born 1952), Canadian politician in Ontario Marie-Eve Morin, Canadian philosopher Marie-Lucie Morin, Canadian public official and diplomat Pat Morin, Canadian computer scientist Pete Morin (1915–2000), Canadian hockey player Randy Charles Morin (born 1969), Canadian author and blogger René Morin (1883–1955), head of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation during World War II Robert Morin (born 1949), Canadian film director Samuel Morin (born 1995), Canadian ice hockey player Victor Morin, inventor of the Morin code, a parliamentary authority used mainly in Quebec
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).