Evar Saar: Bynames and surnames of peasants in 18th and 19th century’s Southern Estonia, the case of Räbinä. #personalnames2019 pic.twitter.com/v7zzuaDlKK— Terhi Ainiala (@ainiala) August 22, 2019
Many trees represented in Latvian surnames. Pauls Balodis presenting his study. #personalnames2019 pic.twitter.com/gGsdWAC40o— Terhi Ainiala (@ainiala) August 22, 2019
Fantastic paper by Osward Chanda on post-colonial naming in Zambia #personalnames2019 pic.twitter.com/HpXWjQfb6u— Ellen Bramwell MacIntosh (@EllenBramwell) August 22, 2019
More than 70% Zambians use foreign first names. Reasons: colonial heritage (British), perceived to be ”international” etc. Osward Chanda in #personalnames2019 pic.twitter.com/AObE7CrDAs— Terhi Ainiala (@ainiala) August 22, 2019
Two very inspiring posters on digital onomastics here at #personalnames2019: a collection of digital Hungarian name resources (there are many!) and a PhD thesis on user names of drug dealers in the darknet (feat. #brakingbad!) pic.twitter.com/ztOd1pIavq— ACDH (@ACDH_OeAW) August 22, 2019
The second day‘s keynote at #personalnames2019 is delivered by Frog, who will ask the question how we come to refer to entities as gods and what names have to do with that. pic.twitter.com/VEKU4AnHm3— ACDH (@ACDH_OeAW) August 22, 2019
Names from Kalevala index identity. Frog in his keynote. #nationalism #personalnames2019 pic.twitter.com/ZE9RnaFv7r— Terhi Ainiala (@ainiala) August 22, 2019
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