Heartily wielding the family motto of "Look well!" through the erosional mists of time, the proud and noble Scottish surname of Montgomery is said to have arrived in Scotland from Normandy. The very earliest records reflect the surname's emergence in Renfrewshire, with roots going back to Normandy- but an ancient family legend takes them back to Roman times:
"A noble Roman was the Root from which Montgomeries came,
Who brought his legions from the war, and settled the same.
Upon a hill twixt Rome and Spain. Gomericus by name;
From which he and his offspring do their sire name still retain."
So it would seem fairly obvious that the family name derives from having lived near a hill (mont) named for a Roman legionaire by the name of Gomericus.
Montgomery is a boy's name and also a surname. It is of English origin and means 'from the hill of the powerful man'.
Monty was used as an abbreviation of his surname - Montgomery.
No it is not. It is likely an English name.
The given name and surname is Montgomery. It is notably a city in Alabama.
Monty is a variant of the name Monte which is a diminutive of Montgomery. It's derived from an English surname meaning 'Gumarich's Mountain' in Norman French.
There is a common surname and given name Montgomery.
The meaning of surname Dekate is unknown.
The name Montgomery originated from a Norman baronial surname meaning "Gomeric's hill." It does not specifically refer to a mountain named Gomery, but rather to a geographical feature or settlement associated with the Norman nobleman Gomeric.
The proud and noble Scottish Montgomery family name originated in Normandy, where it derives from places with similar names such as Saint Foi de Montgomery.
The Italian surname of Franco is first found in the ancient records of Rome, but no meaning for the surname is readily available.
Actually, this is not the Lithuanian surname. It is Polish surname :)
Personally, I think it sounds fine!