Maigh Eo
maonáis ?
Maigh Eo
He is an Irish football player for mayo
Co. Mayo
hahaha! Irish people! Mayo is a rural county in Ireland and many people who live there own farms or live in the counrty side.
Down, Cork, Mayo.
You will find the details of teams on the GAA website or the Mayo website or many of the newspaper websites in Ireland and Irish TV stations, in their sports sections. The GAA and Mayo GAA websites are below.
Yes he is. He is from a town called Kiltmagh which is in county Mayo. That is in the west of Ireland.
According to the Mayo Clinic web site the Mayo brothers were Protestant. They worked with Catholic nuns in the beginning in Rochester so I think people assumed they must have been Catholic as well.Also, the name Mayo sounds like the family would be Irish as there is a county Mayo in Ireland. The father of the Mayo brothers immigrated from England, however.
It is apparently of Scottish origin in many cases. However, there were groups in Donegal and Mayo who may have been assimilated(or are of native Irish origin).
Patrick Woulfe's book gives Míolóid as the usual form with variants Méalóid (west Mayo & w. Galway) and Málóid (some parts of Mayo).
The Irish surname MacBrannan (Mac Branáin) is also anglicized as Brennan in Roscommon, Sligo and Mayo. Mac Branáin was chief of Corcachlann, in eastern Co. Roscommon.
Monaghan is found in the Irish counties of Galway, Mayo and Fermanagh, but originated in Co. Roscommon. The Irish form of the surname is Ó Manacháin. It derives from Manachán (a monk). The Irish county name Monaghan has no connexion with this name as it is from Muineachán.