digitS'
Garden Master
@seedcorn 's rule makes sense to me. Here's a way to hijack
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Gardening:
. Okay! "Yes, I agree. You are never too old to play in dirt."
German was my foreign language choice in high school but I was already experiencing hearing loss and it was a "start strong, stumble across finish line" experience. Because of my college major, I was required to have more credits. I thought that was fine but escaped some of it by sneaking off into a "translation" course. Then, of course, I haven't really used it since
.
It occurred to me to use that for a signature (below) because I planned to mail some seeds to @AMKuska . My family name is Dutch, although that Dutchman apparently arrived in N America during colonial times.
There was a prominent Mormon family with the name. That's both helpful for my genealogical curiosity and a hindrance. Somewhere about the time of the Civil War, life for a couple of generations became seriously disrupted. No surprise there, right? Anyway, I think that the church genealogy went off-course but it now seems to be LDS "gospel."
Dutch but someone well-known was South African. Some have looked at his heritage and gone off in 2 different directions for name origin. It's funny that it isn't likely so grand. But, one direction is to suggest that the name is a variant spelling used locally of one that is very common.
These sorts of things are likely with everyone's family name. Who were the parents of the first John in the Johnson family? Who first arrived in that meadow in the Meadow family and where did they come from?
I guess that Smith is the most common English name. For name origin, it is an occupation so every village has a smith. But, what is the origin of the word? Etymology ... a difficult science.
Steve
Gardening:
Play: @ducks4you , I had to look up "stimme"@digitS' , Ja, ich stimme zu.
Du bist nie zu alt, um im Dreck zu spielen
German was my foreign language choice in high school but I was already experiencing hearing loss and it was a "start strong, stumble across finish line" experience. Because of my college major, I was required to have more credits. I thought that was fine but escaped some of it by sneaking off into a "translation" course. Then, of course, I haven't really used it since
It occurred to me to use that for a signature (below) because I planned to mail some seeds to @AMKuska . My family name is Dutch, although that Dutchman apparently arrived in N America during colonial times.
There was a prominent Mormon family with the name. That's both helpful for my genealogical curiosity and a hindrance. Somewhere about the time of the Civil War, life for a couple of generations became seriously disrupted. No surprise there, right? Anyway, I think that the church genealogy went off-course but it now seems to be LDS "gospel."
Dutch but someone well-known was South African. Some have looked at his heritage and gone off in 2 different directions for name origin. It's funny that it isn't likely so grand. But, one direction is to suggest that the name is a variant spelling used locally of one that is very common.
These sorts of things are likely with everyone's family name. Who were the parents of the first John in the Johnson family? Who first arrived in that meadow in the Meadow family and where did they come from?
I guess that Smith is the most common English name. For name origin, it is an occupation so every village has a smith. But, what is the origin of the word? Etymology ... a difficult science.
Steve