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penbrydd:

penbrydd:

penbrydd:

So, you’re writing a thing, and you need to name a character. And, as we all know, naming a character is a giant pain in the ass. I offer this list of shit I use pretty regularly, for this purpose.

Behind the Name (The etymologies are weird as fuck, in a few places, but it’s great if you’ve got a name and need to find other names that are from or derived from the same culture/language)

Behind the Surname (BTN for family names)

Academy of Saint Gabriel Medieval Names Archive (This is the go-to for medieval names in Europe and the Near East. Hardcore scholarship and a distinct lack of fucking around.)

Kate Monk’s Onomastikon (The original internet name resource.)

The Soldier in Later Medieval England (Actual names from English military rolls around the Battle of Agincourt)

England’s Immigrants (Non-native residents of England, 1330-1550)

Celtic Personal Names of Roman Britain

Mapping the Medieval Countryside - People (People appearing in English inquisitions post mortem, 1418-1447)

Wiktionary’s Index of Biblical Names

Ancient Names Galleria (The weird shit is here. If you need Akkadian or Phoenecian names, those are totally covered.)

Trismegistos People (Names extracted from the Trismegistos Texts – mostly names from Graeco-Roman Egypt.)

Personally, I use the shit out of Trismegistos People, England’s Immigrants, and the Ancient Names Galleria. If you’ve got good sources I didn’t hit, feel free to add them in a reblog. I’m always looking for more good name resources. (And almost all of what I have is Europe and the Near East, with a little North Africa.)

Dropping this update in the most recent reblog in my notes, in the hopes it falls into as many laps as possible. Here’s some more good sources for names, this time with a more African focus.

Wikipedia Category: Surnames of African Origin (which is helpfully divided into sections by language)

Wikipedia Category: Amharic Language Names (I believe this list is primarily, if not entirely, given names.)

 YorubaName (“an online intervention to preserve and document all Yorùbá names in a multimedia format.”)

Writing Adolescent Fiction: Character names: Kenyan, Tanzanian and Ugandan (a list of given names and surnames with notes on how full names are constructed in each culture listed)

Again, if you know any good sources, particularly for regions I haven’t covered, let me know!

Rebageling with some more good shit:

So You Want to Name a Sino (a fairly detailed guide on how to name a Chinese character without sounding like too much of a moron)

Most Popular Baby Names for Girls Since 1960 (most popular American girls’ names, by state, from 1960-2012, as a gif)

Popular Baby Names (the US Social Security database of naming trends in the US, with search options for date, gender, location, and trend)

A Guide to Names and Naming Practises (a UK government guide to common names and structure of names from around the world, split first by continent and then by culture. PDF.)

Curiosities of Puritan Nomenclature (an entire book on trends in English naming and name structure and the Puritan influence, from 1880. PDF.)

Things I am particularly looking for reliable sources for, if you’ve got them: North and South American aboriginal names, Southeast and East Asian names, names from the former USSR, Australian aboriginal names. (All of these by culture or language family, if possible, not just by current national borders.)
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honourablejester:

lotrfansaredorcs:

1. Characters whose Names are Secretly Insults: 

Samwise: means “Half-wise” or “Half-wit.” He is Stupid Gamgee

Faramir: Boromir’s name means “steadfast jewel”, but Faramir’s name just means “sufficient jewel.”

Sufficient.

Denethor took one look at baby Faramir and thought “eh I guess he exists or whatever” which is very in character

 2. Characters who Have Way Too Many Names

Examples include Aragorn son of Arathorn son of Arador heir of Isildur Elendil’s son, descendant of Numenor,  Thorongill,  Eagle of the Star,  Dúnadan, Strider,  Wingfoot, Longshanks, Elessar, Edhelharn, Elfstone, Estel, Hope, The Chieftain of the Dúnedain, King of the West, High King of Gondor and Arnor, and Envinyatar the Renewer of the House of Telcontar

Wait I’m sorry did I say “examples” pluralCuz that was all one guy3. Characters whose parents must’ve been prophets

-Frodo means “wise by experience.” His story is about becoming wise by experience-A lady named Elwing turns into a bird (geddit)

4. Characters whose families were so lazy that they copy-pasted the same first half of a name onto multiple people

Théoden/Théodred 

Aragorn/Arathorn/Arador Éomer/

Éomund/Éowyn/ÉorlElladan/Elrohir/Elrond/Elros/Elwing/Elenwë/Elendil/Eldarion (the laziest family) 

5.Characters whose Names are Expertly Designed so that Newbies can’t Remember Who is Who and Feel Sad

All the people mentioned in number 4Celeborn, Celegorm, Celebrimbor, CelebrianAll the rhyming dwarf names in the HobbitSauron and SarumanArwen and Éowyn

6. Name so nice, you say it twice

Legoas Greenleaf: Legolas’s first name means “Greenleaf” in elvish. Legolas is Greenleaf Greenleaf (thranduil really likes green leaves ok)King Théoden’s name means King in Rohirric. Tolkien decided to name his name his king “King.” All hail King King this is what the fanbase means when we say tolkien was a creative genius with language

To be fair, Théoden is the kingliest king who ever kinged, so I’m pretty okay with this.
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stylishbutdefinitelyillegal:

bfdreaming:

sarahsyna:

actuallykylekallgren:

whatwehadtowatch:

tricksterbelle:

frozenmusings:

gingerhaole:

pirateliz:

realityremedy:

pirateliz:

starline:

aperfectexampleofsarcasm:

new cool meme: find out what each of ur names mean and then shove them together

im white enchantress woman who works with stone

Starline Xiomara Hodge

Star that’s ready for battle with a fame spear. 

That’s pretty accurate. 

I am an oath of God that conquers and lives near the spring by the road.

My first name (Carl), depending on your interpretation, means “man” or “strong” or both. My middle name (Arthur) gets translated as “bear” or “king.” My last name means “the measurer.” I have no idea how to fit these together in a way that doesn’t sound ridiculous.

@realityremedy
I am the Strength of Bears and Kings, the measurer of your fate. 

I’m Lily… the Fox.

Womp womp.

Hope Stone

 Hay field child of clouds who bakes bread and is of the bright-headed clan

Spear-wielding twin who lives on a projecting piece of land.

Narrow strait twin, the cold branch.

A pure Irish princess what is also the daughter of a bear.

Father’s joy princess, son of Hilarius.

Lives in the ash tree grove, oath of God, stately and noble

Noble sort, God is gracious, tree stump, scholar.
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the-knights-who-say-book:

shaelit:

horticulturalcephalopod:

owlbear-dont-care:

silverdrarry:

caseyanthonyofficial:

Why do people never want to tell you their middle name like who gives a **** its not a nuclear launch code its your **** name

reblog with your middle name in the tags

Actually, the practice dates back to the reason we have middle names in the first place!

Some time around the dark ages, everyone believed in witchcraft and wizardry, like ya do. A big principle of magic was the idea of “true names.” If a spellcaster knew your full name, they could do whatever the **** they wanted to you. Of course, people didn’t want that, but there were enough people with the same first names that you had to give people your surname as well, to avoid confusion.

The solution? A secret name in the middle that you don’t tell anyone (unless you believe that they’re not able to do magic and/or you trust them enough that if they DID do magic, you’d be fine).

this is some death note ****

But honestly though, I make it a practice to find out people’s middle names because they DO have power. None of this spell stuff, but listen.

If you’re not listening to me or not taking me seriously and I need your attention NOW, the second I go “SARAH ELIZABETH BROWN” you better believe I’ve got what I want.

It works on everyone, no matter the age or gender or race. It’s like some part of their brain turns into a four-year-old with their hand in the cookie jar. It’s great.

…which is basically the explanation given in The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland!

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