My last name is miller?!
Answers: is it true im scottish, italian, german, english?
Best way to find out is to go back through your generations. Generally, if you research your family and go back....about three to five generations and find your ancestors in the US Census, they'll list their country of origin. I've been doing genealogy research on my family for a few years now and boy, you can learn a lot you may have wanted to always know (and, sometimes, stuff you might not want to know). Good luck!
Miller would be English.
English
I dont think its german. I would think it would be English or Scottish.
Miller. Mila. Milla. Mela. Meela = it's not so much the spelling of a name as the pronunciation. European or Asian I would say
dunno..it sounds english..x
i THINK THATS GERMAN. I know 4 sure is not Italian.
And you are not any of those... unless you were born in dat country, it's just the origin of your last name.
My fiance's last name is Miller on his father's side (Mother's side is Japanese)...anyway, his dad is English, Irish and maybe some German and Cherokee thrown in for good measure.
The surname Miller is primarily of Scottish origin, from Orkney, Caithness, Perth and Kinross, Stirling, North Lanarkshire and South Lanarkshire. It derives from the occupation of miller. The name also denotes Italian, German, English and Spanish ancestry.
The name Miller also originates from some places in England, notably Dorset and western Lancashire.
The name has been carried throughout the world with Scottish and English emigrants.
The surname Miller is primarily of Scottish origin, from Orkney, Caithness, Perth and Kinross, Stirling, North Lanarkshire and South Lanarkshire. It derives from the occupation of miller. The name also denotes Italian, German, English and Spanish ancestry.
The name Miller also originates from some places in England, notably Dorset and western Lancashire.
The name has been carried throughout the world with Scottish and English emigrants.
In the English-speaking world, the surname "Miller" is also the result of anglicizing last names of Germanic descent. "Mahler," "Mueller," "Muller" and "Moeller" have all been rendered variously as "Miller." It is also the south German and Swiss form of Müller.
Depending on how far back your family goes, it is from England, Scotland or Ireland.
Also German, Miller = Mueller in German and many changed their names.