Huet is used as a family name or surname in France, England, Belgium. It is 4 characters long in length.
Huet is a variant of Hose. HosierThe garment. See - Camden explains Chaucer by Hosier. The hosier of modern times sells stockings and other soft 'under clothing.' Two hundred years ago, the hosiers of London were those tailors who sold ready made clothes (qui rendent des habits d'hommes tous faits. Cotgr.); but the original hosier was he who encased the "nether man" in leather: "The chaussure commonly used in England, when surnames were first adopted by the commonalty, was of leather, covered both the foot and leg, and was called hose. Hosier, therefore, is the same with Chaucier, which comes from the Lat. culccarius, and differs but little in meaning from another word used to denote the man who followed this employment, viz., Sutor, Sowter, or Souter, which was in use in English from the time of Chaucer to that of Beaumont and Fletcher. It is still preserved in Scotland, and has become a surname in both countries." Edinburgh Review, April 1855.
The variant form of Hewes. A mis-spelling of Hughes. In the great Scottish family of Dalrymple the Christian name Hugh has generally been spelt Hew.
Surname is the variation of Hughes. The son of Hugh meaning "spirit".
Huet is variant of Hewes. The son of Hew, a variant of Hugh meaning "spirit"; one who was servant to another.
Huet is a variant form of Hugh. This Norman Christian name, though of rare occurrence in its simple form, has furnished a host of derivatives, some of which would hardly be supposed to be of such origin. Who at first sight would take the five surnames, Fitzhugh, Pugh, Mackay, Hoey, and Huson, to be identical in meaning? Yet this is the case; for Fitzhugh is the Anglo-Norman rendering of 'Filius Hugonis,' the son of Hugh; Pugh is a contraction of Welsh Ap-Hugh, the son of Hugh; Mackay, of the Gaelic Mac-Aiodh, the son of Hugh; Hoey is the same name deprived of its Mac; and Huson is clearly Hughson, the son of Hugh. Huggins, Higgins, Hutchins, Hitchins, Hutchinson, Hugginson, Hewet, Hewetson, Howitt, Howis, Howison, Huggett, Hoggins, as well as Hughes, Hughson, Hewson, and probably many other names, are diminutives and patronymics of Hugh, the soft, and of Hugo, the hard, form. See .
How popular is Huet?
Huet is common in France, Mexico, Canada, Belgium, United States, Philippines, Mauritius, Thailand, Australia, England, Morocco, Cuba, Spain, Brazil, Netherlands.
Huet is ranked 15553 on our list.
As per 2010 US census, number of Huets grew by 15.35 per cent to 496 since 2000 and ranked 43511 after elevating 3103 spots. The last name was found in around 2 per million population. Please refer to following table for race and ethnicity.
Race | 2010 | 2000 |
---|---|---|
White | 79.23 | 82.56 |
Hispanic or Latino | 16.13 | 13.49 |
Others | 2.42 | 1.4 |
Asian and Native Hawaiian & Other Pacific Islander | 1.81 | 0 |
Immigrants to US
From Germany
Johann Huet was 29 years old when he migrated to USA on April 22, 1853. He lived in Germany where he worked as farmer and took Kosmos from Bremen. Joseph Huet (38) Farmer, Barthelemy Huet (46) Tailor, Farmer Cesar Huet, Blacksmith Jean Huet, Salvatoro Huet (26) Farmer, Emile Huet, aged 40, Merchant Denice Huet, 50 years old Charles Huet, Charles Huet (29) Bar keeper, and 10 other Huet around 38.46% of whom were farmer while others worked as merchant migrated to US from Havre, Hamburg, Havana & Havre, London and Boulogne & Rotterdam.
Huet Namesakes
- Pierre Daniel Huet, French churchman and scholar
- Conrad Busken Huet, Dutch pastor, journalist and literary critic
- Jean-Baptiste Huet, French painter
- Edmond Huet, director of the Paris city council's works department at the end of the 19th century
- Cristobal Huet, French-Swiss former professional ice hockey goaltender
- Henri Huet, French war photographer
Huet Namesakes
- Pierre Daniel Huet, French churchman and scholar
- Conrad Busken Huet, Dutch pastor, journalist and literary critic
- Jean-Baptiste Huet, French painter
- Edmond Huet, director of the Paris city council's works department at the end of the 19th century
- Cristobal Huet, French-Swiss former professional ice hockey goaltender
- Henri Huet, French war photographer