A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.
You'll be fine
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Guy who betrays everyone to side with Sauron: Sauron-man.
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I don't know if Tolkien's notes support this, but I always assumed that his Entish name was something completely unpronounceable for anyone who isn't a tree, and "Treebeard" was a nickname that he picked for himself. Maybe because he thinks it's funny that other species think he looks like a tree. (I'm sure that ents look clearly different from trees to other ents.)
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In Sindarin (the most common Elvish language), not Entish.
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Guy who betrays everyone to side with Sauron: Sauron-man.
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He also nearly named Celeborn _Teleporno_, which would have been ~~awful~~ amazing. -
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It keeps blowing my mind when I learn that other languages haven't obfuscated the meanings of names behind two thousand years of linguistic divergence. Your name almost certainly means something basic too, you just don't remember what it is. -
Seriously, like Gandalf just means magic elf. So he's just the magic elf that wears grey. Then he's the magic elf that wears white. Names are just that, things we observe, want or expect.Close. It means elf with a stick.
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Guy who betrays everyone to side with Sauron: Sauron-man.
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Close. It means elf with a stick.
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That's a possible translation but most people go with staff/stick for obvious reasons
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It keeps blowing my mind when I learn that other languages haven't obfuscated the meanings of names behind two thousand years of linguistic divergence. Your name almost certainly means something basic too, you just don't remember what it is.
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It keeps blowing my mind when I learn that other languages haven't obfuscated the meanings of names behind two thousand years of linguistic divergence. Your name almost certainly means something basic too, you just don't remember what it is.Yep. Some common names: Steve ← Steven ← Stephanus ← στέφανος = crown (or wealth) Linda ← -linde = tender, soft James ← Iacomus ← Iacobus ← Ἰάκωβος ← Ἰακώβ ← יַעֲקֹב = heel, footprint / follow, watch, observe Karen ← Catherine ← Αἰκατερίνη ← Ἑκάτη = one who works from far away (referring to a goddess)
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Yep. Some common names: Steve ← Steven ← Stephanus ← στέφανος = crown (or wealth) Linda ← -linde = tender, soft James ← Iacomus ← Iacobus ← Ἰάκωβος ← Ἰακώβ ← יַעֲקֹב = heel, footprint / follow, watch, observe Karen ← Catherine ← Αἰκατερίνη ← Ἑκάτη = one who works from far away (referring to a goddess)And "Tiffany" may sound like a very 20th-century American name, but it actually dates back to the early 13th century and is based on a Greek word that's even older. The "Tiffany Problem" is a really interesting phenomenon in the anthropological/perceptual space based on that. Tiffany ← Tifinie ← Θεοφάνεια = "God's arrival/appearance" It's also more closely related to the name "Natalie" than you might think, at least etymologically. Natalie ←Natalia ←natale domini = "birth of the Lord" (Latin)