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"Carpenter" redirects here. For other uses, see Carpenter (disambiguation). For occupation of a Carpenter, see Carpentry.
Carpenter is a surname. Its use as a forename or middle name is rare. Within the United States, it is ranked as the 189th-most common surname.[1] People with the surname Carpenter are listed below in alphabetical order. Meaning: Carpenter - Car-pen-ter (kar' pen tar (or ter)), noun. 1) a person who builds, makes or repairs wooden objects or structures - as in houses, scaffolds, or shelving. - v. make by shaping wood. v.i. 2) to do a carpenter's work. Origin: [1275-1325]; Middle English < Anglo-Norman French < Old French < Late Latin; carpentarius artifex or wainwright, equivalent to Latin carpent(um) two wheeled carriage ( < Celt; cf. OIr carpad chariot) + arius - ARY; see ER2][2] Carpenter name variants and backgrounds
[edit] Y-DNA projectA Y-DNA surname project exists for both the surname Carpenter and its related variants, and the related names in German (Zimmerman), French (Charpentier) and other languages with their name variants within a single project.[3] Y-DNA is passed from father to son virtually unchanged over the generations. DNA has documented that Carpenter, Zimmerman, Charpentier and other related surnames do not have a single common root. While grouping does exist, it seems by parent or native country rather than regional via the most common ancestor. As of August 2009, the Y-DNA project is active with 20 organized groups with number 20 representing genetic near matches (Group 98) and random results (Group 99). There appears to be about 240 tested members with the majority (215) from Family Tree DNA and the others from different DNA testing companies for genetic genealogical testing. Sub-grouping within the group is done in two ways. 1) By genealogical paper trails or the lack there of resulting in connections genealogically and genetically related then genetically related but not connected genealogically. 2) By Y-DNA markers representing genetic mutations or a Genetic distance or variance from the group norm. These mutations within the group can form genetic sub-grouping if confirmed by genealogical material. The possibility of a random mutation occurring in different lines must always be considered in DNA testing and is called a random match. Project administrators have paid special attention to these mutations for group association. Two groups in particular (Groups 2 and 3) have 24 out of 25 markers in common. Further testing, including specialized testing on individual DYS markers, have provided a clearer separation of based on DNA values. Haplogrouping is consistent within the organized groups 1-19, but is not focused on by this genetic-genealogy project. Haplogroups and their haplotypes help reveal deep ancestry based on mathematical probability and tries to relate to prehistoric or estimated cultures, groups or climes. The common western European Haplogroup, R1b, also known as the Western Atlantic Modal Haplogroup (WAMH), shows up in the majority of the groups which is not unexpected with the majority of tested members claiming Europe as a possible location for their ancestors. Those who have this more common haplogroup should test 37 or more markers while most others can start at a 25 markers Y-DNA test. All groups have made an effort to provide a basic paternal lineage that is listed on a separate page and can be accessed via ID numbers on Table 1 or via the Table of Contents “Lineages” hyperlink. Only one paternal lineage claims descent more than 600 years. This is consistent with common genealogy trends and results. While Y-DNA testing will never replace proper genealogical efforts, it is valuable in confirming genetic relationships and non-relationships.
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[edit] Fictional Characters Named Carpenter- George W. Barclay, Jr.: Murder on Pine Island Bayou, Vantage Press, 1992 -- Josh and Lynette (Boudreaux) Carpenter. - Louis Bayard: The Black Tower, William Morrow, 2008 -- "Vidocq is founder and chief of the plainclothes force called the Sureté...to meet his greatest challenge yet, Vidocq teams up with Hector Carpentier, a medical student whose name has turned up on a dead man's body." - David Grisham: The Innocent Man, Doubleday Books, 2006 -- "Mike and Terri Carpenter both worked at the Coachlight, he as a bouncer, she as a waitress..." - Dean Koontz: Sole Survivor, Alfred A. Knopf, 1997 -- "The story begins with a catastrophic, unexplainable plane crash. Three hundred and thirty dead, no survivors. Among the victims, the wife and two young daughters of Los Angeles Post crime reporter Joe Carpenter." - Alistair MacLean: Ice Station Zebra, Doubleday & Co., 1963 -- "On a stormy winter night at Holy Loch, the US atomic submarine 'Dolphin' leaves in a hurry, with orders to take a Dr. Carpenter under the North Polar ice-cap and to surface with him near a burnt-out weather station, called Zebra. Who is he and what does his locked bag contain?" - Eva (Carpenter) McCall: Edge of Heaven, Bright Mountain Books, Inc., 1997 -- "When the author’s grandmother, Lucy Davenport, is traded by her father to Holman Carpenter in exchange for a mysterious favor, her simple mountaintop life is abruptly changed..." - Richard Platt: Pirate Diary: The Journal of Jake Carpenter, Candlewick Press, 2001 -- "Beginning in 1716, Private Diary recounts the adventures of nine-year-old Jake Carpenter as he explores the thrills and perils of life on the high seas." - Deborah Powell: Bayou City Secrets, Naiad Press, Tallahassee, Fla., 1991, Houston Town, Naiad Press, Tallahassee, Fla., 1992 -- "Lesbian crime reporter Hollis Carpenter solves mysteries in Houston in the 1930s." - David Rosenfelt: Open and Shut, Mysterious Press, 2002 (and 5 others) -- Andy Carpenter, lawyer; mystery. The author's first novel, featuring attorney Andy Carpenter, was a finalist for the Edgar and Shamus Awards for best first novel. - Edward Rutherfurd: Sarum, Crown, 1987 -- "Rutherfurd ties London to Sarum in a few places...the Carpenters are descended from a family which was forced to flee Sarum after trying to kill one of Rutherfurd's earlier characters." - Edward Rutherfurd: London, Crown, 1997 -- "The rises and falls of the families Ducket, Silversleeves, Bull, Barnikal, Carpenter, Meredith and Penny..."..."a Puritan character named O Be Joyful Carpenter..." - James Swain: The Night Stalker, Ballantine, 2008 -- "A serial killer, days away from execution, reaches out to ex-cop Jack Carpenter with a surprising request: find his missing grandson." - Herman Wouk: A Hole in Texas, Little, Brown and Company, 2004 -- "Guy Carpenter is a physicist with a quiet, settled life: a prestigious job at NASA, a devoted wife and new baby, and a troublemaking cat. But he is about to get mixed up in an international scandal of enormous proportions." [edit] References
[edit] External links[edit] Equivalent names in other languages
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