Re: Surnames in the ? usage section
I found out Mukhtuk is from Nivkh мухтук "mouse"
https://ru.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/%D0%BC%D1%83%D1%85%D1%82%D1%83%D0%BA
https://glosbe.com/niv/ru/%D0%BC%D1%83%D1%85%D1%82%D1%83%D0%BA
Couldn't find anything to support the whale blubber claim For Stettin I did find the thing about Szczecin so it might be a German surname denoting to a person from Szczecin in modern Poland, since in history Germany and Poland (or parts of the two) were in the same country a lot. For Romius, yeah I also thought that. I'll list it as a theory. For Gekko, I found that it does indeed mean moonlight in Japanese.
https://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/%E6%9C%88%E5%85%89#Japanese
https://glosbe.com/en/ja/moonlight
Forebears finds a few bearers (surname and forename: linking both because it tends to mix up the two in surname forename countries)
https://forebears.io/x/forenames/gekko
https://forebears.io/surnames/gekkoFor Sanet- source that it's a diminutive?For Larinson, most of that information we already knew. For Bestock, I think it's actually from a Slavic last name, though I have no source for this statement and could be wrong. For Lyions- source? For Gaydarzhi, noted. For Korea, that doesn't really give me any actual information. For Bolerjack- source? For Freiwat- I know that "frei, freie" means "free (as in freedom)" in German because of the FDJ. German-Danish translator says the Danish word is "frit". Do you have any source that it means that in Danish?
https://translate.yandex.com/en/?source_lang=de&target_lang=da&text=frei
For the wat or vat part of the name, things I found it meant in Germanic langauges:
Cotton wool (vat in Danish): https://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/vat#Danish
What (wat in older languages or modern regional colloquial): https://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/wat
Walking through water (wat in German, grammatical form of waten): https://de.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/wat
Danish Wiktionary doesn't
find anything on vat: https://da.m.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?search=vat&title=Speciel%3AS%C3%B8gning&ns0=1
What's your source for the Old Norse meaning since I couldn't find anything?
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Messages

Surnames in the ? usage section  ·  Anya Mel’nik or Mel’nyk  ·  12/24/2024, 7:48 AM
Re: Surnames in the ? usage section  ·  Robert  ·  12/24/2024, 5:31 PM
Re: Surnames in the ? usage section  ·  Anya Mel’nik or Mel’nyk  ·  12/24/2024, 6:45 PM
Re: Surnames in the ? usage section  ·  Robert  ·  12/24/2024, 8:37 PM
Re: Surnames in the ? usage section  ·  Anya Mel’nik or Mel’nyk  ·  12/24/2024, 8:59 PM
Re: Surnames in the ? usage section  ·  Robert  ·  12/24/2024, 9:03 PM