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Most Common Surnames
Most Common Surnames
1-1000
1001-2000
2001-3000
3001-4000
4001-5000
Surnames Alphabetical
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Most Common Male Names
1-300
301-600
601-900
901+
Alphabetical list
Most Common Female Names
1-1000
1001-2000
2001-3000
3001+
Alphabetical list
Popular Baby Names
United States - Boys
1-250
251-500
501-750
751-1000
United States - Girls
1-250
251-500
501-750
751-1000
Historic
1880-2005
By State
Ancestry in the United States
United States
Ancestry by city
Mexican
German
Irish
English
African American
More
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Number of people of Honduran origin in the U.S.
All figures come from the U.S. Census Bureau Report issued in June 2004
The Census Bureau defines ancestry as a person’s ethnic origin, racial heritage, descent, or "roots," which may reflect their place of birth, place of birth of parents or ancestors, and ethnic identities that have evolved within the United States.
The following table includes the number Hondurans living in the United States. "Hondurans" are defined as people who marked their ethnic origin as "Honduran" on the Census survey in 1990 and/or 2000.
| Total Number (1990) | 116,635 | | % of US Population (1990) | - | | Total Number (2000) | 266,848 | | % of US Population (2000) | 0.1 | | Change 1990-2000 | 150,213 | | % Change 1990-2000 | 128.8 |
- Rounds to 0.0.
Some ancestries are general may encompass several ancestries not listed separately (i.e., African American, White).
NS Not statistically different from zero at the 90-percent confidence level.
Notes: Because of sampling error, the estimates in this table may not be significantly different from one another or from other ancestries not listed in this table.
People who reported two ancestries were included once in each category. The estimates in this table differ slightly in some cases from
the estimates in other data products due to the collapsing schemes used. For example, here German does not include Bavarian. Some
groups correspond to groups identified separately in the race and Hispanic-origin questions. The race item provides the primary source of
data for White, Black, American Indian, Alaska Native, Asian groups, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander groups. The Hispanic-origin question
is the primary identifier for Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, and other Hispanic groups.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 1990 Census and Census 2000 special tabulations.
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