Double Indian names. Indian male names and meanings - choosing the best name for a boy

The author walks through the sites of Native Americans, they are also North American Indians, and giggles vilely over all sorts of pretentious Vigilant Eagles, White Feathers and Beautiful Doe (fallow deer, by the way, are not found in America), which naive whites consider real Indian names. And over the lists of "Indian names" common on the Internet, he also giggles. In fact, everything is a little more complicated.

Most often, the so-called "Indian names" have nothing to do with real Indians.

Sometimes Indian and Indian names are confused (there is no difference in English anyway), and then all sorts of Basanti and Raji appear in the novel about the love of a beautiful Huron and a brave ranger.

Sometimes slightly modified European names are issued for Indians: Nadie (Nadia), Jacy (Jesse), Meli (Mary), Kateri (Katerina). The Indians had to work hard to adapt unusual sounds to their languages, sometimes the original name is not recognizable: Magi (Cherokee Michael), Atian (Abenaki Etienne), Biyen (Ojibwe Pierre).

Sometimes "Indian" names are created by writers or cinema:

The name Chakotay from Star Trek is allegedly translated from the language of the Anurabi Indians as "A man who walks the earth, but sees only the sky." The actor playing Chakotay is really an Indian, but from the Mayan people, the Anurabi tribe does not exist, the language is fictional just like a Klingon.

People who name their children Katet think it's an Indian word for "fate", but it's a word from Stephen King's novels in a language he invented himself.

For one of John Wayne's films, the writers came up with a "real Indian" name Tahnee Mara, which sort of means Lone Wind.

Yes, it is easier: to come up with some gibberish, and not look for a native speaker for advice.

The Indians are warning Americans who want to get back to their roots by giving their own child an Indian name: don't use these lists.

If you really have Indian roots, you must have older relatives who know what kind of names are accepted in your tribe. In many nations, you can’t just take a noun you like and make it the name of a child. Rather, it will be something like a participle with an ending denoting a man or a woman, which means it is long and, perhaps, dissonant in the opinion of a white person. In addition, the translation of the name will be rather strange than poetic, in the European view. Papekitaapama - looking at the dark, for example, or Haapechikhshimo - calling in a hurry (shawnee names).

If you do not have such roots ...

Ayita doesn't mean "first dancer" among the Cherokee, say the Indians. Perhaps this word means something in another Indian language, but rather, it is borrowed from the Nigerian language, in Nigeria there is such a dance.

Chenoa does not mean "white dove" in the Cherokee language. It doesn't mean anything in any Indian language. Yes, there is such a city in Illinois, but where its name came from is unknown. The Europeans misunderstood something and wrote it down incorrectly.

Dakota or Lakota does not mean "friend" at all. This plural means "allies", and the Indians, of course, do not use it as a name.

Hinto, from the Sioux language, would be a good name for a roan horse, but not for a human child.

Kotori does not mean owl in the Hopi language. This is some scumbag wrote it down tokori, the sound the Hopi believe the owl makes.

And no, the word nidawi does not mean "fairy" or "fairy" in the Omaha language. The word nida, without the feminine ending - wi, Omaha and Osage denoted giant bones that were found in the ground. As a result, Nidavi is not even a mammoth, but a skeleton of a mammoth. A beautiful name for a girl, we say, trying not to laugh out loud.

But the icing on the cake in this collection is the name Weeko. It does not mean "beauty" in the Sioux language. This is a colloquial version of the word wikoska, meaning venereal disease. Facepalm.

One cannot vouch for all-all-all Indian languages ​​(there are too many of them and they sometimes differ very much), but on average an Indian word is longer than an English word. And if the name of the Indian girl is Kaya, you have reason to suspect that something is not right here. In fact, the supposedly Indian name Kaya was formed from the name of one literary heroine Kaya "aton" my from a children's book. In non-Persian it means "setting stones" and is a real name. However, it would not have occurred to any Indian girl to shorten her name to Kaya. It's the same as being called "chewing".

Oleg and Valentina Svetovid are mystics, specialists in esotericism and the occult, authors of 15 books.

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American (Indian) names

American (Indian) male and female names and their meaning

Our new book "The Energy of Surnames"

The book "The Energy of the Name"

Oleg and Valentina Svetovid

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American (Indian) names. American (Indian) male and female names and their meaning

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There are a lot of scammers, pseudo-magicians, charlatans, envious people, people without conscience and honor, hungry for money. The police and other regulatory agencies are not yet able to cope with the increasing influx of "Cheat for profit" insanity.

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These days, many have a great deal of sympathy for Native American culture. That is why, among other things, traditional Indian names have become somewhat popular lately, translated into Russian, as a rule, in a few words. Below we will talk a little about the interesting tradition of naming among the Indian tribes and give a list of the most beautiful, in our opinion, examples.

About Native American Names

The imagery and unusualness that Indian names have captivate many. Still, because where else can a person be called, for example, a Ferocious Bear or a White Wolf. But in fact, everything is much more complicated, because the principles by which names can be built and given differ greatly in different tribes. Somewhere Indian male names do not differ from female ones, but somewhere they change depending on age or other conditions. Some names may be specific to only one tribe. And other tribes use several names at once. Plus, it should be taken into account that Indian names are divided into those that parents give to children for communication, and those that are given by shamans and priests during initiation. Another feature is that many of the so-called names by which the Indians presented themselves to strangers are nicknames, while they hid their real names, protecting themselves from witchcraft. And the Europeans took it at face value.

Kinds of names

In the tradition of many Indians, as already mentioned, to give several names. The first is given by the parents. And then he can somehow be called a tribal priest. Often in doing so, he gives the child one of his proper names to provide him with protection in a spiritual sense. Then the ceremony of initiation into adulthood brings the child another name. And in itself, his life or character can lead to the appearance of a nickname. In official documents, those Indian names that are given by parents or shamans most often appear.

Explanations

The names that we will consider below are mostly examples from the tradition of the Ojibway tribe. It must be said that within the society of even one single tribe, an incredibly large number of variants of names is possible, so that a simple listing of them would require several hundred pages. Therefore, we confine ourselves to a few examples. Indian female names will be given by us along with male ones, since they are often the same for both sexes. In addition, it must be said right away that beautiful epithets like the Vigilant Puma are a stylization of Europeans that has little in common with the original tradition. The Plains Indians have something similar, but their variants are somewhat different from what the pale-faced are accustomed to expect.

List of Indian names

  • Anaquad. This word means cloud. It is also used as an independent name, but most often, as a basis that forms compound Indian names. Feminine variants with it and with most other stems are formed by adding the ending "okwe".
  • Abitavanaquad. Means half cloud.
  • Binesivanaquad. This name can be translated with the phrase "thunder bird cloud".
  • Giniu-anakvad. The approximate meaning is "eagle cloud".
  • Mizhakvad. This name means a clear sky, free from clouds.
  • Gizhig. This word means heaven. Used as a base.
  • Gagegizhig. The name translates as "eternal sky".
  • Wasegigig. In this variant, the translation “clear sky” will be most accurate.
  • Shige. Sunlight base.
  • Debashige. This name has approximately the following meaning: "light that reaches distant spaces."
  • Camig. Base meaning "earth".
  • Vaviecamig. A fairly simple name meaning round earth.
  • Big. A stem pointing towards a rock or stone.
  • Navajibig. This name means middle rock.
  • Gabo. This is the basis, denoting a standing person.
  • Gabegabo. A name that can be translated like this: "eternally standing."
  • Naganigabo. Means the one who is in front.
  • Mamajigabo. A peculiar name that indicates a person who is standing and stirring something at the same time.
  • Macwagabo. Means standing bear.
  • Niogabo. In this case, the name is translated as "four standing people." Women's names, by the way, with this basis are formed by adding "vikve" to the end.
  • Nigig. Otter.
  • Omakaki. Frog.
  • Bizhiki. Buffalo
  • Giniu. Eagle

These are names denoting animals. They are used both by themselves and as part of other names. If you add the ending "ns" to them, then they will acquire the meaning "small ...". Both in the usual version and in the diminutive version, they are the same for men and women.

  • Bizhikins. Little Bison.
  • Omacakins. Frog.
  • Macons. Bear cub.

Indian tribe name meaning
Cherokee ADAHY who lives in the forest
AKECHETA-su-fighter fighter
BODAWAY fire kettle
BILAGAANA Navajo white
CHAYTON Sioux hawk
CHOVIOHOYA Hopi young deer
CHU "A Hopi snake
Baby CIQALA Dakota
DICHALI talks a lot
DYAMI Eagle
Elsue Algonquin Flying Falcon
ENAPAY Sioux brave
Etu sun
GUYAPI Erlich
HASTIIN Navajo man
Cheyenne HEVOVITASTAMIUTSTO whirlwind
High Chief HIAMOVI Cheyenne
HONIAHAKA Cheyenne wolf
HOTAH-Su-white
HURITT Algonquin elegant and beautiful
KUCKUNNIWI Cheyenne wolf
Lonato Flint Flint
OWN sioux red
MAKYA Hopi eagle hunter
MANAPI is wonderful
MANTOTOPAH Cheyenne four bears
MATOSKAH Sioux Weißer Bär
NAWAT left hand
NIKITI der Runde
NOCONA Comanche Wanderer
PAJACKOK Algonquin Donner
PALLATON Krieger
SIKE Navajo Er sitzt zuhause
SUCKI Algonquin Schwartz
TAKODA jedermanns Freund
TANGAKWUNU Hopi Regenbogen
TOCHO Hopi Berglöwe
TOGQUOS Algonquin Zwilling
Cherokee TOOANTUH springender Frosch
zee navajo rock
TSIISHCH"ILI Navajo curly hair
WAMBLEESKA Sioux white eagle
WAQUINI Cheyenne hooked nose
WEMILAT on rich parents stemming from
WYNONO firstborn
Yuma is the boss's son

Unusual name for a male Indian

Name (Tribe of Indians) Meaning
APONOVI (Hopi) “When the wind blows a gap”
DONEHOGAWA "He protects the gates of sunset"
EMOTHI “He talks while walking”
ENYETO "He works like a boar"
GENIINEWAB “He is like an eagle”
HAWIOVI (Hopi) “He comes down the stairs”
HESKOVIZENAKO (Cheyenne) "He wears a porcupine"
JOLON "Valley of the Dead Oak"
KOSUMI (Miwok) “Salmon fishing with a spear”
LOKNI (Miwok) "Rain falls through the roof"
METHOTASE “Eggs in the sand”
MONA (Miwok) “Gathers Indian”
NASTAS (Navajo) “curves as whipped up reverse on foxtail”
NUTKA (Wickaninnish) “Not in a canoe”
OGALEESHA (Sioux) “Wearing a red shirt”
OPECHANCANOUGH (Algonquin) “He knows his soul (pure) is””
Tiktu “Bird, he climbs out of potatoes”
WAHANASSATTA (Cheyenne) “He runs with his fingers out”
YISKA Navajo “the night is over”

List of 50 Most Popular US Indian Surnames

Most of us Indians have become normal surnames like the rest of the American population. However, there are some that are quite special. How about Yazzie ranked four of the most popular surnames of Native American residents of America. But Benally, Tsosie, Oxendine and Nez have special phonetics, the same time I associate with indigenous surnames. Here are now the fifty most commonly used surnames of US Indians, in descending order:

1. SMITH
JOHNSON
BEGAY
YAZZIE
LOCKLEAR
JONES
WILLIAMS
BROWN
DAVIS
10. WILSON
THOMPSON
THOMAS
MILLER
JACKSON
WHITE
MARTIN
LI
HUNTING
JAMES
20. LEWIS
TAYLOR
ANDERSON
CLARK
GARCIA
MARTINEZ
BENALLY
SCOTT
TSOSIE
MUR
30. NELSON
KING
JACOBS
OXENDINE
WALKER
NEZ
HARRIS
ALL
HILL
MITCHELL
40. PHILLIPS
JOHN
BAKER
YOUNG
ADAMS
CHAVIS
MORGAN
ROBERTS
HALL
LOPEZ
50. WRIGHT

Indian names are unique in their kind, because they do not have verbatim analogues in any other language.

However, everything we know about Indian names remains just the tip of the iceberg. Let's try to clear things up a bit.

For example, how many people know that names that are used by one tribe may not be used at all by another? Or the fact that Indian names (male and female) are the same for some tribes?

In addition, each can have multiple names. One of them will be often used in everyday life, while the second will be known only to relatives and close people. This is the so-called spiritual or true name, which is determined by the shaman.

True Indian names are never given to strangers, since there are beliefs that such actions will bring bad luck and misfortune not only to a particular person, but to his entire family.

For example, consider the names of the Ojibway tribe. These complex Indian names (female) consist of several: the first is given by parents at birth, the second is assigned at the Mide ceremony (a kind of baptism), and the third is given by fellow tribesmen and used as a nickname. The result of such traditions was the frequent repetition of names. Most often they contain the words "sky", "earth", "bird", "stone".

1. Formed from the word "cloud":

Binasiwanakwad - Cloud Bird

  • Gichi-anakvad - Great Cloud;
  • Makadevakvad - Dark Cloud;
  • Abitavanaquad - Part of the Cloud;
  • Vandanakwad - Sailing Cloud;
  • Gagige-anakvad - Eternal Cloud;
  • Wabanakwad - Clear Cloud;
  • Mizhakvad - Eternal Cloud.

2. Names derived from the word "sky":


3. Names, in the root of which are the words "earth", "rock":

  • Vaviecamig - Round Earth;
  • Asinivakamig - Land of Stones;
  • Navajibig - Middle Stone / Rock.

4. Names formed from the words "sitting" and "standing":

  • Gabegabo - Standing Forever;
  • Naganigabo - Standing Ahead;
  • Macwagabo - Standing Like a Bear;
  • Mamashkavigabo - Standing Strong;
  • Manidogabo - Standing Spirit;
  • Bijigabo - Standing Here;
  • Guekigabo - Turning And Standing;
  • Acabidab - Permanently Seated;
  • Gagekamigab - Sitting on the Earth;
  • Nazhikewadab - Seated One.

5. Names that come from the word "bird":

  • Wabishkobinashi - Pure Bird;
  • Ojavashkobinesi - Blue Bird;
  • Makadebineshi - Dark Bird;
  • Gavitabinashi - Near the Bird;
  • Nizhikebineshi - Lonely bird;
  • Gichibineshi - Big Bird;
  • Dibishkobinashi - Like a Bird;
  • Gagigebineshi - Eternal Bird.

6. Names that include the name of the animal:

  • Makva - Bear;
  • Migizi - Eagle;
  • Bizhiki - Bison;
  • Vagosh - Fox;
  • Gekek - Hawk;
  • Nigig - Otter;
  • Binet - Black grouse;
  • Adicons - Little Caribou;
  • Maingans - Little Wolf;
  • Gagons - Little Porcupine;
  • Vagoshance - Little Fox.