Tough is an English language surname, with two distinct known origins.
It is predominantly a Scottish name, a toponymic surname ultimately deriving from Scottish Gaelic tulach, "hillock". A variant spelling is Touch. Both are pronounced like "took" with a long vowel, the "-gh/-ch" sound the same as in "loch". [1] [2] In 1969, The Scots Magazine suggested the name retained its Scottish pronunciation, particularly the "-ch", due to being "sufficiently localised and un-aristocratic to have missed the application of genteel polish." [3] Patrick Hanks described Tough as a variant of Tulloch (from places around Dingwall), [1] while George Fraser Black and David Dobson both wrote that it is a toponymic surname in its own right, from the parish of Tough near Alford, Aberdeenshire. [2] [4] The surname dates to the 14th century in Aberdeenshire, [4] [5] and Dobson noted that it arrived in the United States from a transportee in 1652. [4]
It can also be an English name, originating from Middle English togh or tow(e) (Old English tóh) [1] [6] as a byname for someone with characteristics of toughness: Hanks referred to being brave and stubborn, [1] and Mark Antony Lower referred to being sturdy and capable of endurance. [7] Traditionally pronounced like "tow", it also has Tow as a variant spelling; [1] [6] Clive Upton and William A. Kretzschmar Jr. wrote in the 2017 Routledge Dictionary of Pronunciation that the current pronunciation of the non-Scottish surname is that of "tough". [8]
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