What do your name and your surname mean translated literally?

What do your name and your surname mean translated literally?
Pure Iron here

Falcon who praises Jarilo (slavic pagan god)

Both my name and surname are of slav origin.

Great Rock

白 means white

>Pure Iron
... чeгo блядь? нeт тaких имeн в pyccкoм языкe.

Greek name German surname

I'm LITERALLY named after a dessert popular in the slavlands.

God's Castle

My first name means Light Giving.

My last name means nothing. I'm almost certain they fucked it up at Elise Island.

Napoleon?

kisiel

>Kissel.jpg
>Napoleon?

Christian Pagan.

Not even kidding.

Exactly the kind of shit I like Japanese for.
t. Rabbitov

because kisel is not a dessert

>giving GRU your names

First name doesn't mean anything.
Surname means Juniper Hill.

Nigger it's sweet and viscous to the point where you usually eat it with a spoon.

It's a fucking dessert.

Golden Child

but you don't eat it. It's a drink.

"From the meadow" in old English for my forename, my surname is named after a region.

>you usually eat it with a spoon
Your mum makes it wrong. It is supposed to be drinkable.

Only God judges me, the man of salvation
Pretty cool if you ask me.

>English: from the Middle English and Old French personal name Lorens, Laurence (Latin Laurentius ‘man from Laurentum’, a place in Italy probably named from its laurels or bay trees). The name was borne by a saint who was martyred at Rome in the 3rd century ad; he enjoyed a considerable cult throughout Europe, with consequent popularity of the personal name (French Laurent, Italian, Spanish Lorenzo, Catalan Llorenç, Portuguese Lourenço, German Laurenz; Polish Wawrzyniec (assimilated to the Polish word wawrzyn ‘laurel’), etc.). The surname is also borne by Jews among whom it is presumably an Americanized form of one or more like-sounding Ashkenazic surnames.

>Name
Ruler (Киpилл/Kirill)
>surname
White rock (Baйcбepг/Weissberg)

Cherryblossom Garden

Surname means "meadmaker"

Harsh Winner here

t.神城
t.金子
t.桜庭

My name comes from the old Germanic word for "battle"

It's white mountain, idiot

murray?

Gib me your sister Anastasia

Why so rude, pidor? I never really cared 'bout my surname's meaning/origin, could easily mix up some stuff.

Chill.

English names don't usually translate to anything

>Tfw you realize Japanese names are autistic and just named after random objects and car companies, and aren't real names, it's like how Indians named people
>Japanese name their children stuff like "Sunflower", "Blue girl", "Cherry blossom", and "apple tree"

Only they are all read by their kunyomi, so there's a clear difference with normal compound words.
Our names have old meanings too, but just like in Japanese the names and the words have grown apart.

> named after random objects and car companies
> car companies
American retardation.
Car companies were named after their founders, not the other way around.

Plus they were mentioning their last names

It means "Honey, dear, babe, affection" in spanish
"Cute" in italian
And something like "field hunter" in japanese

Still not sure whether the original was spanish or italian tho.

that's the joke you autistic Russian

>but just like in Japanese the names and the words have grown apart.

Not really, in Japanese a lot of names and the modern words are the same

name - praise the strength, one of praiseworthy strength, Slavic

surname - tailor, Slavic

Carino?
狩野(karino) 狩=hunt,野=field

After all the shit I've heard from burgers on this board, I can't tell your jokes and real stupidity apart.

>Name
Rock
>Surname
Big stick or mace

Care to give an example of a Japanese name that has the same pronunciation as a word and as a name?

owl

Autumn the holder of the heel

Yup.

Sakura - Cherry blossom

Or sometimes it's "Sakurako" but still fundamentally the same

This tbqh

Tree of wisdom from Courville (city in northern France)

Happy McHopeful would be the translation

Talk about irony..

I don't think so tho?
mine is 小林(small forest),totally a surname

Satoru
Michiru
Kaoru

Pretty popular Japanese names that also double as verbs ("to realize', "to be full, to rise", "to smell sweet" respectively)

Half Dane

Sugar
Coz my dic so sweet

John, Son of Vikings

old oak

Cтapoдyбoв?

That's an exception alright.

You said that a lot of names are the same though, and I still fail to see this.
Like how these names are all written without the okurigana that would make them actual verbs. The pronunciation of the character as a verb and as a name is therefore different, because the name includes the last syllable in the character.

Desire Protect Mountain.

or

Desire Helmet Mountain.

What about all the color names? Season names?
Aoi
Akako
Midori
Aki
Haru

There's plenty, don't make me pull out a Japanese dictionary

I'd rather you'd just conjure a list of completely random names of random people, and tell me how many of those function as words with the exact same pronunciation in daily language.

I have no doubt you can produce quite a long list, simply because of the sheer number of Japanese names in existence, but that still doesn't make the Japanese like Indians in that they name their children after random objects, as was the original comparison the discussion was about.

Means "little page" as in page boy. Comes from old french I think.

My name is knight always-hard. We should meet up in my bedroom.

Unexpected

> they name their children after random objects

Of course it isn't just random objects, that's a bit of a lighthearted joke, I'm sure they put some thought into it like "Oh my daughter was born in Autumn" or "I love Autumn" "let's name her Aki" but fundamentally they're still named after something tangible, compared to most western names which have become completely detached from any meaning besides as a name (for the most part)

"pertaining to life, vital"
pretty ironic cause I've been depressed for a good decade now.

>Blanket Jackson
>North West
>Sage Stallone

Patrician, Famous in Battle, Plunderer

Barking God's Gift.

Or something like that, surname suffix is a little confusing.

Literally hard moon probably means full moon

>blanket
>north
>sage
These people were all made fun of for naming their kids that

man of temporary sheepherders housing.

youngman youngmans son

Son of the Knight/Horse-rider

Pasture of a shitty English town.

freshwater fish blessed by God
yeah

One born in light
It stops at the top :DDD
I wish I was memeing.

basically means forest/crooked hill

defending men blacksmith

50 storms

>Name
Bear
>Surname
Vicar

Day Freight Yard Climax

Home young funny.

Onni Toivonen?

Hill of birches

Brave Bear ????? Small Cape

brave thief

It's cariño in spanish, different from carino. Your surname may have nothing to do with spain.

>Name
No one is as god and the messenger
>Surname
To own but pay.

Gypsy detected

Everking, son of God's grace.

Descending eagle (sunset) Beyond

Lord of the sun

Dove Lord

Unharmed - name,
Vein stream - surname.

It wasn't very funny.Tbh I think most are bad jokes and a smaller amount of legit stupidity or good jokes.