Finally after much waiting That Catholic Show season 2 is on the way.
Six months is an eternity in Internet time, so I hope they make it worth the wait.
In the meantime, enjoy a mini-webisode.
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Jellystone Park
While many people will be staying at home for summer vacation or touring the great parks that this country has to offer, my brood and I will be sampling the delights of Jellystone Park with Yogi Bear and Boo Boo too. Yes, the annual pilgrimage to this family friendly campground is about to begin: a solid week of frenetic days and sleepless nights; mini-golf and water hole; bugs and campfires; panning for fossils and face painting. The pain/pleasure will be shared by the in-laws: father, mother, sister, niece, and nephews. We usually get two side-by-side cabins and a camper pad and share meals and child watching duties. We take meals in common as well as water gun activities. I hate getting there, but I usually have a good time once I'm there. Now, I may need a vacation to recover from my vacation, but that's because I'm getting old ... ;-)
What's on your summer plan?
What's on your summer plan?
Friday, June 6, 2008
Name your own city
If you could name a city or place absolutely anything you wanted, what would you call it?
I like language and I sometimes think about how place names come about. I'm often surprised at the complete lack of originality that denizens of a particular place demonstrate in naming their town, city, whatever.
The #1 choice in the too-dumb-to-think-up-a-name category is: the exact same name as some old city. Examples: Rome, NY; Moscow, IN; Berlin, VA; Vienna, VA
The next most obvious choice is to stick the word "New" in front of some old beloved city. Gag. How boring: New York, New Jersey, New Mexico, etc.
Equally obvious is to stick: town, ton, burgh, city, ville, land, or polis on the end of some Noun.
Slightly more creative and a little more natural is, well, nature landmarks as a suffix:
So I went on a hunt for place names because I was curious. Some interesting hits turned up for place name etymology: German, Latin, Slavic, Greek, Celtic, city residents,
Maybe I'll call my house something like manor estates do. Problem is, I can't think of anything ... We jokingly refer to Mom's as Home Base, mine as Outpost 1, and my brother's as Outpost 2.
I like language and I sometimes think about how place names come about. I'm often surprised at the complete lack of originality that denizens of a particular place demonstrate in naming their town, city, whatever.
The #1 choice in the too-dumb-to-think-up-a-name category is: the exact same name as some old city. Examples: Rome, NY; Moscow, IN; Berlin, VA; Vienna, VA
The next most obvious choice is to stick the word "New" in front of some old beloved city. Gag. How boring: New York, New Jersey, New Mexico, etc.
Equally obvious is to stick: town, ton, burgh, city, ville, land, or polis on the end of some Noun.
Slightly more creative and a little more natural is, well, nature landmarks as a suffix:
- ford
- fort
- field
- plains
- view
- burgh
- side
- grove
- wood
- way
- Little/Big
- White/Black/Red/Color
So I went on a hunt for place names because I was curious. Some interesting hits turned up for place name etymology: German, Latin, Slavic, Greek, Celtic, city residents,
- German names from prehistoric and medieval times:
- with the suffix -au, -aue (related to rivers or water), see German words Au or Aue. This meaning of -au (earlier spelling ow, owe, ouwe) describes settlements at rivers, creeks. Example: Passau, a town Aue, rivers named Aue.
- with Low German suffix -oog (= "island"). Example: Dutch Schiermonnikoog.
- with the suffix -um (North Germany), -heim (South and Central Germany, Switzerland, Alsace), -ham / -am (Bavaria and Austria), -hem / -em (West) (all cognate to English home and the English place name suffix -ham). Examples: Alkersum, Bochum, Borkum, Pforzheim, Kirchham, Schiltigheim
- with the suffix -ing or -ingen, -ungen, -ung, -ens (meaning "descendants of", used with a personal name as the first part). Examples: Göttingen, Straubing, Esens.
- with the suffix -stadt or -stedt ("town"). Examples: Darmstadt, Neustadt.
- with the suffix -burg ("keep", borough). Examples: Hamburg, Luxembourg, Regensburg (with the river Regen), Salzburg (with the Ancient Roman reference to salt), Straßburg (Strasbourg).
- with the suffix -berg ("mountain"). Examples: Heidelberg, Nürnberg (Nuremberg), Königsberg ("king's mountain", now Kaliningrad)
- with the suffix -dorf or -torf ("village"). Example: Düsseldorf.
- with the suffix -furt ("ford"). Examples: Erfurt, Frankfurt.
- with the suffix -brücken or -brück ("bridge"). Examples: Saarbrücken, Osnabrück, Innsbruck.
- with the suffix -hausen ("house"). Examples: Mülhausen (Mulhouse), Mühlhausen, Schaffhausen.
- with the suffix -feld ("field"). Examples: Bielefeld, Mansfeld.
- with the suffix -werth, -wörth, or -ort ("holm"). Example: Kaiserswerth, Donauwörth, Ruhrort
- with the suffix -roth or -rath, -rode, -reuth, -rade ("clearing"). Example: Roth, Wernigerode, Overath. It can also be used as the prefix -Rade: Radebeul, Radevormwald.
- German names from modern times. They usually follow the established patterns.
- Wuppertal ("Wupper valley"), Karl-Marx-Stadt ("Karl Marx city", name for Chemnitz during the DDR era), Wilhelmshaven ("William's harbour", referring to King William I of Prussia).
Maybe I'll call my house something like manor estates do. Problem is, I can't think of anything ... We jokingly refer to Mom's as Home Base, mine as Outpost 1, and my brother's as Outpost 2.
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