Cumbe is used as a family name or surname in England. It is 5 characters long in length.

Family Name / Last Name: Cumbe
No. of characters: 5
Origin: England
Meaning:

Cumbe is a variation of the Coumbe. See Combe - From Anglo-Saxon comb, Celtic cenm, a hollow in a hill, a valley. In medieval writings, At- Comb, At-Cumb, etc. There are places called Comb or Combe in Sussex, Devon, Somerset, &c. Combs in Suffolk-Coombe in Wilts, Dorset, and Hants,—and Coombs in Sussex, Derby, and Dorset. Several of these have conferred their names on families.

Professor Leo asserts that cumb means a mass of water-it originally signified a trough or bowl, and subsequently, not a valley—as Bosworth wrongly asserts—but an extensive though running sheet of water. The Professor's ground for this statement appears to be the occurrence of a heafod and an ævylm,-a head and a spring—in connection with acumb; but surely this is very slender evidence for so sweeping an assertion upper end of a valley is called its head, and that there should be a spring in a valley is nothing extraordinary. But some scholar maintain, therefore, with Dr. Bosworth, that COMBE is a valley, either with or without water. In fact, the South Downs are full of these depressions, which, from their geological position, can no more 'hold water' than can this notion of the learned philologist of Halle.

Lastname Cumbe is the variant form of Combe. Valley, sharp ridge; mass of water.

Cumbe is a variant of Combs. Dweller at the deep hollow or valley.

A variation of the Coombs. One who came from Coombes meaning "valleys," in Sussex.

The lastname is the variant form of Combe. From Anglo-Saxon comb, Celtic cenm, a hollow in a hill, a valley. In medieval writings, At- Comb, At-Cumb, etc. There are places called Comb or Combe in Sussex, Devon, Somerset, &c. Combs in Suffolk-Coombe in Wilts, Dorset, and Hants,—and Coombs in Sussex, Derby, and Dorset. Several of these have conferred their names on families.

Professor Leo asserts that cumb means a mass of water-it originally signified a trough or bowl, and subsequently, not a valley—as Bosworth wrongly asserts—but an extensive though running sheet of water. The Professor's ground for this statement appears to be the occurrence of a heafod and an ævylm,-a head and a spring—in connection with acumb; but surely this is very slender evidence for so sweeping an assertion upper end of a valley is called its head, and that there should be a spring in a valley is nothing extraordinary. But some scholar maintain, therefore, with Dr. Bosworth, that COMBE is a valley, either with or without water. In fact, the South Downs are full of these depressions, which, from their geological position, can no more 'hold water' than can this notion of the learned philologist of Halle.

How popular is Cumbe?

As per 2010 US census, number of Cumbes grew by 112.04 per cent to 229 since 2000 and ranked 82317 after elevating 59471 spots. The last name was found in around 8 per ten million population. Please refer to following table for race and ethnicity.

Race 2010 2000
Hispanic or Latino 90.83 89.81
White 5.24 6.48
Black 2.62 0

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