RANDOMNESS
- Sublevel 114
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Re: RANDOMNESS
Obey to original!
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- wisdom crystal finder
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Re: RANDOMNESS
What does this mean?Скромовский особняк
Balance is imperative; without it, total collapse and destruction is imminent.
- The Kakama
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Re: RANDOMNESS
Google translate says it's 'Skromovsky mansion', Sublevel made a drawing of that.
Is this my final form?
- Sublevel 114
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Re: RANDOMNESS
Skromovsky mansionThe Abacus wrote:What does this mean?Скромовский особняк
"Skromovsky" is family's surname.
I think...

(it is taken from my dream)
Last edited by Sublevel 114 on 20 Dec 2013 18:27, edited 1 time in total.
Re: RANDOMNESS
what does -овский mean? I've seen it in many Russian names 

- Sublevel 114
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Re: RANDOMNESS
well... "-овский" is just one of name's endings form (like "-man" in english). I think it refers to man's nation. For example, my surname ends on "-ов", and as I know, that means it is 'russian surname'.OnyxIonVortex wrote:what does -овский mean? I've seen it in many Russian names :P
Re: RANDOMNESS
sort of like -ez in Spanish, then... both of my surnames have it XD
- ENIHCAMBUS
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Re: RANDOMNESS
Not always at ending. Scott surnames start with "Mc-", Irish with "O'-" and Dutch with "Van -" or "Von -".
"-Ez" is definitively is spanish. XD
I found "-sky" surname ending in many eslavic nations, it means "eslavic surname", right?
"-Ez" is definitively is spanish. XD
I'm pretty sure "-man" isn't english. "-ton" and "-ter" are true english, you also can consider "-son" which is very common in North Europe.Sublevel 102 wrote:well... "-овский" is just one of name's endings form (like "-man" in english). I think it refers to man's nation. For example, my surname ends on "-ов", and as I know, that means it is 'russian surname'.OnyxIonVortex wrote:what does -овский mean? I've seen it in many Russian names
I found "-sky" surname ending in many eslavic nations, it means "eslavic surname", right?
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- Sublevel 114
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Re: RANDOMNESS


I'm vurned.
Re: RANDOMNESS
-Ski is definitely a Slavic surname suffix, together with a bit more rare -cki or -dzki, at least in Polish (the latter the same phonetically because of Polish voicing and devoicing rules). Not sure about other Slavic countries. -Ski is actually an adjectival suffix (which could be translated -ish) and in would would decline -ski, -skiego, -skiemu, -skiego, -skim, -skim, -ski in nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, locative and vocative respectively. And since Polish adjectives also differ in gender, a woman - mind, with the same exact last name wouldn't be, as her, say, husband, called Kowalski, because -i at the end specifies masculine gender; she would be called Kowalska, and would decline as -ska, -skiej, -skiej, -ską, -ską, -skiej, -ska in the same respective cases. Kowalski is the most common last name in Poland, derived from the word kowal meaning a blacksmith, from archaic kować, (nowadays: kuć) meaning to forge. Ki stands for palatalized k, the rest is pretty much the same on IPA terms.ENIHCAMBUS wrote:Not always at ending. Scott surnames start with "Mc-", Irish with "O'-" and Dutch with "Van -" or "Von -".
"-Ez" is definitively is spanish. XD
I'm pretty sure "-man" isn't english. "-ton" and "-ter" are true english, you also can consider "-son" which is very common in North Europe.Sublevel 102 wrote:well... "-овский" is just one of name's endings form (like "-man" in english). I think it refers to man's nation. For example, my surname ends on "-ов", and as I know, that means it is 'russian surname'.OnyxIonVortex wrote:what does -овский mean? I've seen it in many Russian names
I found "-sky" surname ending in many eslavic nations, it means "eslavic surname", right?
From what I know, Russian names in general are more complex, because for one, obviously you have the first name chosen by your parents, and a patrilineally inherited last name, but then there's also the *middle name* thing which is created by taking the first name of your father and adding a suffix, which I suppose what -овский is, sadly I don't know the Cyrillic alphabet. Which is funny, because last names generally are often created from the first name of fathers, my own included. The Russian last name system may be thought of as a stage between what most of the Europe uses and the Icelandic system, where there is no last names the way most people think them of, and the child, most often, has a different last name than their parents, because the last name is always "[first name of the father]-son" or "[first name of the father]-daughter". Daughter, if I remember right, is dóttir in Icelandic, so yeah, Sigriður, the daughter of Bjorn Arnfinnson would be called Sigriðdur Bjornsdottir (-s- is an infix used when creating a single word out of two seperate ones). That kind of thing used to be common around germanic countries, but now is only used in Iceland.
TT: I guess one could use those words to describe it.
TT: If armed with a predilection for the inapt.
TT: If armed with a predilection for the inapt.