Cuss

Cuss
In the medieval period and even earlier the holder of this name would rarely have been out of a job. Generally recorded in the spellings of Cush, Cuss(e), or even Kiss(e), the derivation is from the Old French "Cuisse" and referred to the makers of leather armour for the thigh area. The leather had to be particularly thick and strong enough to deflect a spear or sword. A mounted soldier later became known as a Cuirassier if he wore leather, rather than steel armour. The English surname was more properly "Kisser" or "Kissa", but perhaps for obvious reasons this form lost popularity and only four examples are to be found in the latest London Telephone Directories (1991). The Coat of Arms is a silver field, a black chevron charged with three silver fountains. In the dexter chief is a silver knights spur known as a mullet. Examples of the surname recordings include John Kisse in the 1327 Subsidy Rolls of Leicester, Thomas Kysse in the 1329 Court Rolls of Suffolk, and John Cusse in the Rolls of Warwick in 1430. On July 18th 1638 William Cush was recorded at St. Swithins Church, Stonegate, London, and James Cush was a witness at St. Benets Church, London, on March 10th 1754. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of William Kisere, which was dated 1224, in the records of St. Bartholomews Hospital, London. during the reign of King Henry 111, known as "The Frenchman", 1216 - 1272. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

Surnames reference. 2013.

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  • Cuss — may be: CUSS I, the name of the first drilling ship An acronym meaning Common Use Self Service standard A Creole word used in the English Caribbean as a synonym for argue. Another word used is the word buse , e.g. Jonny meh just hear Eddna and… …   Wikipedia

  • cuss — [kʌs] v [I and T] BrE old fashioned AmE spoken [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: curse] to swear because you are annoyed by something cuss out [cuss sb<=>out] phr v to swear and shout at someone because you are angry ▪ She got mad and started… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • cuss´ed|ly — cuss|ed «KUHS ihd», adjective. U.S. Informal. 1. cursed. 2. stubborn; perverse; cantankerous. –cuss´ed|ly, adverb. –cuss´ed|ness, noun …   Useful english dictionary

  • cuss|ed — «KUHS ihd», adjective. U.S. Informal. 1. cursed. 2. stubborn; perverse; cantankerous. –cuss´ed|ly, adverb. –cuss´ed|ness, noun …   Useful english dictionary

  • cuss — (n.) 1775, Amer.Eng. dialectal, troublesome person or animal, an alteration of CURSE (Cf. curse), or else a shortening of the slang sense of CUSTOMER (Cf. customer). Verb meaning to say bad words is first recorded 1815. Related: Cussed; cussing.… …   Etymology dictionary

  • cuss — [kus] n. [< CURSE; CUSS n. 2 < ? CUSTOMER] Informal 1. a curse ☆ 2. a person or animal, esp. one regarded as odd or annoying: used humorously or contemptuously vt., vi. Informal to curse cusser n …   English World dictionary

  • cuss — informal ► NOUN 1) an annoying or stubborn person or animal. 2) a source of harm of misery. ► VERB ▪ use offensive language; swear or curse …   English terms dictionary

  • cuss — con·cuss; cuss·ed; cuss·ed·ness; dis·cuss·er; dis·cuss·ible; ex·cuss; per·cuss; reper·cuss; cuss; dis·cuss; cuss·ed·ly; …   English syllables

  • cuss — cuss1 [ kʌs ] verb intransitive or transitive INFORMAL to swear ,cuss out phrasal verb transitive AMERICAN INFORMAL cuss someone out to shout offensive words at someone because you are annoyed with them cuss cuss 2 [ kʌs ] noun count 1. )… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • cüssəli — sif. Boy buxunlu, gövdəli, cəsamətli, qamətli. Cüssəli kişi. – Rüstəm kişi atın üstündə çox şad oturmuşdu və olduqca cüssəli z. görünürdü. M. İ.. Siz sağa baxdıqca müxtəlif cüssəli, cürbəcür boybuxunlu kişilər gözünüzün qabağından ötüb keçəcəklər …   Azərbaycan dilinin izahlı lüğəti

  • cuss — 1 verb (I, T) AmE informal, BrE old fashioned to use rude words because you are annoyed by something: It does a fella good to cuss if he wants to. cuss sb out phrasal verb (T) AmE spoken to swear and shout at someone because you are angry: My Mom …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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