Cockburn Family History Scottish (Midlothian) and northern English: habitational name from a place in Berwickshire named Cockburn, from Old English cocc 'cock, rooster' (or the related byname Cocca) + burna 'stream' (see Bourne ). This surname is traditionally pronounced Coburn.
Cockburn Family History
Scottish (Midlothian) and northern English: habitational name from a place in Berwickshire named Cockburn, from Old English cocc 'cock, rooster' (or the related byname Cocca) + burna 'stream' (see Bourne ). This surname is traditionally pronounced Coburn.
Congratulations on your video hittin the algorithm
lol, thanks. not sure what did it... maybe the algo likes cockburn too :)
I'd hesitate to visit a place called cockburn
🤣
Perfect🤣
Edit: I just can not 😂😂 every fact ..50 times said. It is too much, can not breathe enough for the laughing. Made it until 2:24
Sir George Cockburn is wild
🙂🙂
This has been running wild in my head for days, finally found the source for the info i was looking for…The cockburn
brilliant hahaha
i figured it was named after another mcdonalds hot coffee incident
loool
That poor old lady
Theres at least a few British women out there whose married name is Cockburn? Now that’s true love😂
agree totally; you have to like someone A LOT so accept that as your new surname lol
Cockburn 😂
Always good to find out a bit more about a remote and somewhat unknown cockburn :)
51st fact: There is no such place as Antartica.
Care to elaborate? :)
@@50factsabout The name should be Antarctica…you forgot the “c”.
My bad, changing it now :)
@@50factsabout No problem 👍