Occupations, yes, but more often the town, city, country of origin.
oliver
Quincy was their last nam-o
Aristotle Onassis, Jackie Onassis,
OBAMA!!!
Miskovski is American form o Polish last names Myszkowski or Miśkowski (derived from place names Myszków, Myszkowo, Miśkowa or similar).
No it is not Italian names usually end with a vowel usually a i and o
there is ocupio ovea omoplo and oplonarty
When alphabetizing last names with apostrophes, you typically ignore the apostrophe and the letter that follows it. For example, "O'Connor" would be listed under "O" rather than "C." If there are multiple names starting with "O'," they would be arranged based on the subsequent letters, such as "O'Connor" coming before "O'Neil."
Oh, dude, singers with last names ending in "o"? Let me think... how about J.Lo? Yeah, Jennifer Lopez counts, right? And there's also Pitbull, if you're into that. But honestly, who even pays attention to last names these days? Just enjoy the music, man.
Ortiz, Orellana, Ordones, Orejel. As odd as it seems, O'Higgins!
No, they don't. Only certain names of Irish origin follow that form.
In earlier times your last name was usually just your trade, for example "Harry the blacksmith" would just become "Harry Smith", last names were originally just a way of distinguishing certain people. Other last names like "Williamson" come from son of William, Jake o' rilley means Jake son of rilley