Knowledge (XXG)

Talk:Eastern Slavic naming customs

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romanization standards at all. This same people will use the 2010 Ukrainian National system here and there without realizing it, mostly for geographical names, as even fans of BGN/PCGN 1965 don't write "Kyyiv" instead of "Kyiv" or "L'viv" instead of "Lviv". Some people even went to courts in attempts to change romanizations of their names, to no avail as Ukrainian laws don't allow this (one can change name in Cyrillic but not pick romanization, except if particular romanization of the name was already used in their existing documents). It's a mess, but the situation is getting better as people are getting more aware of and accustomed to the 2010 Ukrainian National system (for example, I see more use of it in online names and such).
697: 676: 331: 310: 1164:`Would it be better to preserve the "Igor/Ihor/Ihar" distinction?` -- In the context of the article's table: yes, definitely preserve the distinction. If merged into "Igor" it will annoy at least some (or many) Ukrainians and Belarusians for no benefit. Besides, this name aren't the same in romanization, in Cyrillic writing and in pronunciation. The same logic applies to virtually all other names. One "almost exception" that I came up with is Ivan (Cyrillic ru/uk/by: Иван/Іван/Іван) which is romanized the same way and pronounced about the same way (IMHO), but it's still written differently in Cyrillic. 551: 707: 786: 541: 282: 262: 520: 436: 173: 415: 142: 74: 53: 446: 341: 1364:. These edits introduced a great deal of editorializing, POV, and just plain incorrect material, much of it written incomprehensibly. The edits also removed a lot of correct, properly sourced material. Most of the edits since then have been fairly minor, or have partially reverted or corrected the edits by 213.87.145.86. In my judgment it's easier to simply revert to this earlier version. — 183: 22: 1188:"The Ukrainian National system of 2010 is used for general romanization of Ukrainian terms and names in Knowledge (XXG). It is official for all proper names in Ukraine, and is used by the United Nations. It is intended for readers of English, and is easy to read and type. It also corresponds to the current UNGEGN 2013 and BGN/PCGN 2019 systems." -- 1288:
I would like to propose no longer using the name that is also the name of the person currently in the position of Supreme-Commander-in-Chief of an army that is waging a war outside of the borders of its country. There seems to be no particular use for precisely this name to be used as an example, and
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Taking a look at the article on the name Vera, it suggests that the name itself originated in Slavic languages and the only suggestion it had a different origin is poorly sourced. I would also argue that the fact it is being pared with a Slavic diminuitive makes it obvious that we are dealing with a
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in Slavic cultures... but von Lehndorff is German, of German aristocratic descent. While she was born in East Prussia, perhaps making a Slavic name more likely, this statement needs a citation. If it can't be supported, it can perhaps still be rescued, by removing the claim of it being a Slavic name
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A side note rant: Some Ukrainians believe(d) that BGN/PCGN 1965-compliant romanizations were "God's gifts", often without knowing about BGN/PCGN 1965 existence. Some find the 2010 Ukrainian National system ugly and ignore it as much as they could, others surprised to find out that Ukraine has any
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I'm not sure what is "old Ukrainian national system (= BGN/PCGN)". While there was plenty of national (and Soviet) romanization systems for Ukrainian, to my knowledge, none of them were fully in accordance with BGN/PCGN 1965. Per 2019 agreement the BGN/PCGN 1965 system replaced with the 2010
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To your first point, I don't know what system is supposedly being used, but you're right that it's evidently not been followed consistently. To your second point, if we want a consistent system across languages (Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian...), then it seems the only language-neutral
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something we want to do. Would it be better to preserve the "Igor/Ihor/Ihar" distinction? Is there any actual gain in clarity from merging them all to "Igor"? Or are we just annoying a bunch of Ukrainians and Belarusians for no discernable
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Ukrainian National system, but the 2010 Ukrainian National system isn't "old" - it is "current" and in force as of January 2022. Hopefully, the Ukrainian Government dropped the habit of changing romanization systems every 3 years for good.
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national systems Latin "i" should be used to represent Cyrillic "й" at this position (instead of "j"). And at the very next row Russian "Сергей" is transliterated as "Sergei" with Cyrillic "й" represented as Latin "i" - an obvious
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readers - such as myself - (may) feel uncomfortable (to say the least) now that that name is used in the context of an article about naming customs, i.e. with no particular relation to that person.
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There. Now you know how to identify an Eastern Slavic person's family name, given name and patronymic name. Oh, I guess for completeness it should mention that the patronymic usually ends in
1547: 1116:, Knowledge (XXG) is at the mercy of the English language's own inconsistency: if there's a common name in English, we use that, even if it doesn't fit the systematic romanization (e.g. 1469:
I'm saying, if "the traditional way of identifying a person's family name, given name and patronymic name" is all it is, then the article need not be much more than one sentence:
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At the 25th row Russian/Ukrainian/Belarusian Игорь/Ігор/Ігар transliterated as Igor/Ihor/Ihar with Cyrillic "г" represented as Latin "g" for Russian and as Latin "h" for
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What about (for a start) the repertoire of common names, with their etymologies? Taken literally, the lead sentence says that does not belong here.
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Note 1 below the table for the male names says: "The same romanization system is used for all three languages for comparative purposes."
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At the 10th row Russian "Дмитрий" transliterated as "Dmitrij" with Cyrillic "й" represented as Latin "j". This is correct for
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Proposal: replace name that is also name of commander of an army waging a war outside the borders of its country
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Does the section "Anglicisation" say anything not equally applicable to writing in the source language(s)? —
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Is that really all it is? The naming customs consist of recognizing that the patronymic ends (usually) in
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on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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In Eastern Slavic naming customs, a person's given name is followed by a patronymic and a family name.
1068:(in accordance with their national romanization systems). This is contrary to the statement that "The 878: 1369: 21: 1499: 1460: 1266: 712: 1315:
or it is about east Slavic names in general and keeps it's current title. Right now aside from a
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I call on anyone knowledgeable to replace it with a name that can serve well as an example.
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When I was doing some research for Knowledge (XXG) , google showed me a curious name:
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romanization system is used for all three languages for comparative purposes."
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Slavic name. Worth looking into but I don't think it merits a dubious tag.--
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2. Provided romanizations are inconsistent and often wrong. For example:
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In one family could have been several people with different surnames.
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Feel free to edit the article attached to this page, join up at the
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Either this article is only about russian names and is called
935:В одній сім'ї могли буди декілька людей з різними прізвищами. 837:
The surname "Litvinenkovich" is triple-patronymic generation:
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As for your parenthetical, there are two issues. One, by the
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Macarion suffix "/u/o/e/i + k" or "ko" for better sounding
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Demographics and ethnography of Russia task force articles
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B-Class Russia (demographics and ethnography) articles
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Language and literature of Russia task force articles
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1. Exactly what "same" system is used in the table?
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the demographics and ethnography of Russia task force
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I'm about confused as to what you're postulating...
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it is only about russian names not east slavic ones—
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All interested editors are welcome. 7: 1618:Low-importance Soviet Union articles 1603:Low-importance Central Asia articles 1104:. 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rated as 392:This article has been rated as 247:This article has been rated as 119:This article has been rated as 1337:, before a series of edits by 1034:I have few problems with it: 967:Makarevich (1 son of a Makar) 828:A candidate for Guinness Book? 611:and Central Asian portions of 157:Demographics & ethnography 1: 1613:B-Class Soviet Union articles 1598:B-Class Central Asia articles 1523:B-Class Anthroponymy articles 1504:16:40, 13 November 2023 (UTC) 1490:02:54, 13 November 2023 (UTC) 1405:Eastern Slavic naming customs 887:18:45, 16 November 2017 (UTC) 877::-) Can any surname beat it? 732:and see a list of open tasks. 563:Eastern Slavic naming customs 471:and see a list of open tasks. 366:and see a list of open tasks. 289:This article is supported by 269:This article is supported by 93:and see a list of open tasks. 1593:WikiProject Ukraine articles 1465:03:44, 25 October 2023 (UTC) 1278:01:24, 16 January 2022 (UTC) 1090:01:46, 15 October 2020 (UTC) 480:Template:WikiProject Ukraine 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861:Litvinenkov 577:Afghanistan 565:is part of 557:Asia portal 202:WikiProject 1517:Categories 1417:patronymic 1413:given name 1379:in writing 1366:Psychonaut 1247:compatible 1066:Belarusian 1048:, but for 911:It is both 605:Uzbekistan 593:Tajikistan 585:Kyrgyzstan 581:Kazakhstan 1496:25eanglin 1457:25eanglin 1438:–vič/–vna 1321:blindlynx 1249:name. -- 1062:Ukrainian 1054:Ukrainian 984:Makarchi 958:Макарчий 854:Litvinenk 804:Archive 1 1482:—Tamfang 1427:and the 1419:name in 1353:contribs 1190:WP:UKROM 1177:WP:UKROM 1134:WP:UKROM 1126:policies 1122:Zelensky 1118:Groysman 1109:benefit? 1008:unsigned 791:Archives 617:Pakistan 609:Xinjiang 589:Mongolia 1475:vič/vna 1442:Tamfang 1385:Tamfang 1050:Russian 952:ing ) 898:Tamfang 762:on the 657:on the 501:on the 474:Ukraine 465:Ukraine 421:Ukraine 396:on the 369:Belarus 360:Belarus 316:Belarus 251:on the 123:on the 30:B-class 847:Litvin 842:Litvin 621:Russia 224:Russia 206:Russia 148:Russia 36:scale. 1359:WHOIS 1294:Redav 1251:Perey 1145:Perey 1102:ISO 9 978:ing) 931:Makar 597:Tibet 1500:talk 1486:talk 1461:talk 1446:talk 1415:and 1389:talk 1370:talk 1347:talk 1298:talk 1255:talk 1242:Vera 1237:věra 1228:Vera 1206:talk 1175:and 1149:talk 1132:and 1086:talk 1070:same 1064:and 1052:and 1016:talk 992:talk 919:talk 902:talk 894:enok 883:talk 849:enok 619:and 613:Iran 243:High 200:, a 115:High 1138:old 1100:is 892:Is 875:son 873:son 871:son 863:ich 754:Low 649:Low 493:Low 388:Low 1519:: 1502:) 1488:) 1463:) 1448:) 1411:, 1391:) 1372:) 1300:) 1257:) 1232:is 1208:) 1151:) 1106:is 1088:) 1018:) 994:) 921:) 904:) 885:) 856:ov 615:, 607:, 603:, 599:, 595:, 591:, 587:, 583:, 579:, 155:/ 151:: 1498:( 1484:( 1477:. 1459:( 1444:( 1431:. 1387:( 1368:( 1361:) 1356:· 1350:· 1345:( 1296:( 1270:Δ 1253:( 1204:( 1147:( 1084:( 1014:( 990:( 917:( 900:( 881:( 766:. 661:. 505:. 400:. 295:. 275:. 255:. 221:. 127:. 42::

Index


content assessment
WikiProjects
WikiProject icon
Anthroponymy
WikiProject icon
WikiProject Anthroponymy
the study of people's names
the discussion
High
project's importance scale
WikiProject icon
Russia
Language & literature
Demographics & ethnography
WikiProject icon
Russia portal
WikiProject Russia
WikiProject
Russia
project page
project discussion
High
project's importance scale
Taskforce icon
the language and literature of Russia task force
Taskforce icon
the demographics and ethnography of Russia task force
WikiProject icon
Belarus

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