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Re: Eoin and Sean both Irish for John?
Seán (it's ALT 160, btw) :) is from the Norman form of John, Jehan, and Eoin is directly from the Greek form, Ioannes (as is Ioan and possibly Ian).Ian is the Scottish form.Similarly, Ean is the Manx form of John, and Ioan, Iefan (Anglicized to Evan), and Ieuan (that's the one my great-great-grandfather used) are Welsh forms.**Vita Brevis, Ars Longa**Lilypie Expecting a baby Ticker

This message was edited 3/11/2008, 6:38 AM

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Excellent, Penguiny7, thank you! As for the other variations, could you give me the pronounciations? One thing that is discouraging for some of the names is that there are no prn guides, especially when it's a form of another name.
Correct me if I've goofed:
Ean = Ian
Iefan, would you use a "v" in it's original form?
Ieuan = Ewan
Ioannes, I'm not sure.Thanks for the fada help, but I still must not be doing it correctly. Could you describe how to do it step by step? Thanks again, :)
Tempestgirl
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Ean - not sure, but I think it's just EEN
Iefan - an f in Welsh makes a v sound (it's the ff that makes the f sound)
Ieuan - yeah, it's close to Ewan
Ioannes - I don't know about that one, I'm not that familiar with GreekIn case you're not aware, the num pad on your keyboard does shortcuts to pretty much everything. Make sure your num lock is on, and you press and hold Alt while you type some number which corresponds to something. Then let off Alt and it magically appears. It's fun to play around with. For some reason 130 is é, but 160-163 are the rest of the lowercase vowels. The uppercase and some other vowel accents are in the 130s and 140s.
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Hey there Penguiny7,
Thanks for your help, I hadn't known about the keypad shortcuts. I'd been trying with the numbers above the keyboard(and no numlock).Thanks,
Tempestgirl
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