| Subject: | Re: German "Stein" |
|---|---|
| From: | "Dr. Jamshid Ibrahim" <Jdibrahim@xxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| Date: | 28 Dec 2006 08:39:22 -0800 |
| Newsgroups: | sci.lang |
nycram schrieb: > As you probably know full well, there are two totally unrelated types > of German names including "stein". > > a) Names derived from geographical features suitable for the placement > of a medieval style defensive burg. The name of the geographical > feature is then used as a family name, either for the owners or for > wannabe owners or for locals who moved away and got called "the people > fron x-stein. > > b) Names in which "stein" means jewel--like your example > Bernstein=amber, Marmelstein=marble, rubinstein=ruby, eckstein=diamond. > For historical reasons these names are usually borne by people of > Jewish origin. > > No useful purpose other than obfuscation is served by mixing the two > classes of names. > > I think Einstein is one of the jewel-names. > > Gary Yes; I believe this makes sense and the German: Edelstein. Do you think most people bearing this name were of Jewish origint (the Jews traded with Edelsteine (gems)? Does that show Einstein as a name for a jewel meant there was only one gem. |
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