Semite name

>Semite name
>Mongol surname

What's the average combo in your cunt.

>Semite name
>Semite surname

t. David Andrews

Biblical name + anglosaxon or norman last name

Like John Smith

what's the difference between biblical and semite?

>Latin name
>Slavic, German, Hungarian or Italian surname (or sometimes a mixture of two or several)

>Germanic/Christian name
>Straight up translation of old Swedish army name that was instead just made up because Swedes couldn't fucking understand old finnish

it might have greek origin so its not necessarily semetic

the bible made them famous not Semitics

bible talks about sandniggers only, every biblical name is semitic one

>2 Semite name/Spanish name
>2 Spanish surnames

>Arabic Name
>Turkish Surname

>West Finland

>Spanish name
>Italian last name

but both spanish and both italian are really common aswell.

>Arabic name
>Spanish surname

t. Jamal Hernandez

Jamal is arabic?

yes, but some Muslim countries change the spelling on it

>italianized latin/jew name
>italian surname

Christian names (mostly Greek, Latin or Hebrew)+Georgian surnames

>Christian name
>Arabic surname

t. Muhammad Roberto

This

also
>Italian name
>Spanish surname

Example: Gianfranco Martinez

>made up forename
>trade surname
Pleb UK summed up

Jamal means camel in arabic

Not camel , it means Cemal.
Camel is something like deve or something

>Given name- generic north indian hindu name from a list of about 100-200 hundred names.
>Surname- Family name(Gurjar in my case, so with it ending with iya or wal)

How do you guys know arabic?

Didnt mean to reply to you

anglicised gaelic name
anglicised gaelic surname

Kem chho bhai?

I have a Semite Name and Anglo Surname.
The Jew name is super common, though.

how come siobhan is spelt so fucky?

>Literally anything
>Literally anything

Krystal Methany Hernandez

I'm not even memeing. Combine any names

>biblical or ancient finnish memeing
>almost anything + nen

Yeah but that's a differently pronounced "Jamal". The "Jamal" as in the name means beauty.

baka baka jamel(the name) means beauty

>Biblical names, finnified ofc. Or ancient finnish names rarely you get the occasional swedish one

>Translated swedish surnames or original ones

My Arabic teacher teased someone named Jamal as camel while the other one named Jamil as beautiful. That's all I remembered.

>Greek name
>Arab surname

Im rajasthani marwari not gujrati

By the way, I fucking hate how there are Polish Americans who can't pronounce their names correctly
or women whose surnames end in -ski
-ski is the male form you fucking trannies, -ska is the female one

>italianized greek name
>italianized latin surname

جمل = camel
جمال=can be used as a name meaning beauty

From Rome

>Jewish name/latin name
>Abruzzese last name

Abkhazian name
''We wuz khan and shieeet'' last name

First names(we usually have multiple first names. Some people use the last first name as their main one.)
Mostly biblical, but Scandinavian names like Karl, Tor, Björn, Tor-Björn, Astrid, Erik, Sven, Agnes, Anders, Arvid, Elsa/Else, Fanny, Frida are very common.

Surnames are very Scandinavian here (*son, *qvist, *lund, *ström, *gren, *sten or *berg). Scandinavian surnames have prefixes and suffixes. The suffix is almost exclusively Scandinavian. The prefix is sometimes biblical.

Sven Erik Karl-Viking Pettersson(Traditionally, people had 3 first names and used the last one as their spoken name) would be called Karl-Viking.
If you only have two first names, there is a 50ish chance of the first on being your spoken name. I only have two first names and I use my first name. My cousins (Sven Adam *ström and Karl Jacob *ström) use their second names.

Because when we were officially codifying the language again, they decided direct phonetic transcription was too Englishy. They wanted to be special snowflakes.

Mizrahim and about half of Ashkenazim:
>Semite name
>Semite Surname

other half of Ashkenazim
>Semite name
>German or Polish surname

Russians

>Russian name
>German or Polish surname

Shitty ancient Irish name
Weird location based surname

I'm curious, what polish names are the most common?

>tfw turkic name
>tfw turkic surname with a lineage going back to 15th century
heh

Yeah no. Every name from the Bible is Semitic originally.

>Semite or Lithuanian name
>Lithuanian, Polish or Russian last name

Greco-Roman + Frankish names
Greco-Roman + Frankish surnames