AFAIK, they came from around both of the major Russian Mennonite colonies, Molotschna, and Chortitza, and left either just prior to (Dad's side), or following (Mum's side) WWII.hwhatting wrote:Thanks for that - I didn't kow that баклажан could also mean "tomato", but I checked and it seems it does (or did in the 19th century) in several dialects.hubris_incalculable wrote:an example of the Russian part would be the word for tomatoes: "Bockelzhonn"
From which part of Russia did your ancestors come?
Your Native Language
Re: Your Native Language
Re: Your Native Language
This thread is really interesting, and I'm a bit annoyed that I'm more or less British as far back as counts*. I have documented Scottish and Irish ancestors, one or two of whom may well have spoken Gaelic (surnames like Ní Mháille would suggest so), but we're talking centuries ago. Far enough in the other direction and you get Norman French. My Welsh family don't speak any Welsh beyond numbers, dim ysmygu and "Please can I go to the toilet?" and the I never got any suggestion that my great-grandmother spoke anything other than English.
So, boo!
* Also: Finnish ettins and lesser Norse deities, but I don't think that counts.
So, boo!
* Also: Finnish ettins and lesser Norse deities, but I don't think that counts.
- communistplot
- Avisaru

- Posts: 494
- Joined: Thu Oct 07, 2010 6:49 am
- Location: La Ciudad de Nueva York
- Contact:
Re: Your Native Language
For me, well I grew up with English & Espanish (New York English & Nuyorican Espanish respectively.). My Ancestors would have spoken PIE, Proto-Uralic & Various African tongues.
The Artist Formerly Known as Caleone
My Conlangs (WIP):
Pasic - Proto-Northeastern Bay - Asséta - Àpzó
My Conlangs (WIP):
Pasic - Proto-Northeastern Bay - Asséta - Àpzó
- johanpeturdam
- Sanci

- Posts: 36
- Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2004 9:32 pm
- Location: Bratislava, Slovakia, originally: Funningur, Faroe Islands
- Contact:
Re: Your Native Language
I speak Faroese as a native language. However, since I've been learning Danish since the age of 18 months, I probably could add that as a second native language, but in general I count it as my first foreign language.
Ungur nemur, gamal fremur
Da giovani si impara, da adulti si applica
Da giovani si impara, da adulti si applica
Re: Your Native Language
My native language is English.
I'm half Chinese (although I look like a white guy; people are always surprised to learn I'm part Asian) and part English, Scottish, Belarusian, and Ukrainian. My mother emigrated from Hong Kong with her family when she was 12 in the early 1970s, so she and her family speak Cantonese. However, after they arrived in Canada, my mother spoke English far more often than Cantonese. Her English is native-speaker level; she actually speaks better English than Cantonese (but I wouldn't know, because she never speaks Cantonese at home, so I never learned it). As for the other half of my ancestry, English, Belarusian, Ukrainian, and possibly Russian were spoken.
For some reason, my last name, Carpick, is very rare so far as I know; I think it's a corruption of a Slavic word. Anybody have any idea what that could be?
I'm half Chinese (although I look like a white guy; people are always surprised to learn I'm part Asian) and part English, Scottish, Belarusian, and Ukrainian. My mother emigrated from Hong Kong with her family when she was 12 in the early 1970s, so she and her family speak Cantonese. However, after they arrived in Canada, my mother spoke English far more often than Cantonese. Her English is native-speaker level; she actually speaks better English than Cantonese (but I wouldn't know, because she never speaks Cantonese at home, so I never learned it). As for the other half of my ancestry, English, Belarusian, Ukrainian, and possibly Russian were spoken.
For some reason, my last name, Carpick, is very rare so far as I know; I think it's a corruption of a Slavic word. Anybody have any idea what that could be?
-
Chartophylacium
- Niš

- Posts: 4
- Joined: Tue May 01, 2012 8:38 am
- Location: Kamenz, Germany
Re: Your Native Language
My native language is the Upper Saxon Dialect of German. A mother language in the meaning of this thread is of course German. Since the half of my ancestors are from Silesia there is quite a chance Polish is a mother language, too. The other half of my ancestors are from Saxony, so there is quite a chance, too, that Sorabian is another mother language.
Languages I speak: German, English, Spanish
Languages I speak a bit: Danish, Norwegian, Mandarin, Japanese, Polish, Upper Sorabian
Languages I speak a bit: Danish, Norwegian, Mandarin, Japanese, Polish, Upper Sorabian
- WeepingElf
- Smeric

- Posts: 1630
- Joined: Wed Mar 08, 2006 5:00 pm
- Location: Braunschweig, Germany
- Contact:
Re: Your Native Language
My native language is High German, close to the standard, but with some Low Germanisms strewn in. There are several Low German words (such as Schüppe for Schaufel 'shovel'), and a slight northern accent in pronunciation. Much like the accent of former chancellor Gerhard Schröder, who grew up in a village about 20 km from my home village, though not quite as thick I think (it is hard to tell with which accent oneself is talking!).
...brought to you by the Weeping Elf
Tha cvastam émi cvastam santham amal phelsa. -- Friedrich Schiller
ESTAR-3SG:P human-OBJ only human-OBJ true-OBJ REL-LOC play-3SG:A
Tha cvastam émi cvastam santham amal phelsa. -- Friedrich Schiller
ESTAR-3SG:P human-OBJ only human-OBJ true-OBJ REL-LOC play-3SG:A
Re: Your Native Language
Looks like it's a corrupted or variant spelling of Karpik, which exists as a family name in Polish and means "little carp". Derivations of this word are attested as family names also in other Slavic languages, e.g. Russian Karpov (yes, the chess player).Adjective Recoil wrote:For some reason, my last name, Carpick, is very rare so far as I know; I think it's a corruption of a Slavic word. Anybody have any idea what that could be?
Re: Your Native Language
I have that, too. At least when I'm back in Ostfriesland or talking to friends from there about shovelling. Not a frequent topic, though..WeepingElf wrote:There are several Low German words (such as Schüppe for Schaufel 'shovel'),
Re: Your Native Language
FWIW, I don't think I stuck out much linguistically during my 2½-years stay in Braunschweig. I grew up basically where the first S of "Kassel" straddles the white line: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c ... alekte.PNG. I don't speak the local Platt, but looking at the isoglosses in the DTV Atlas Deutsche Sprache, I'm familiar with many of the expressions indicated as typical for my region, even if not all of them are in my active vocabulary. Braunschweig is about halfway on the line between Hannover and Magdeburg.
(And yeah, Schüppe in informal contexts for me, too.)
(And yeah, Schüppe in informal contexts for me, too.)
Re: Your Native Language
That's odd. I don't have any Polish ancestry that I know of (although now that I think about it, my grandpa did once mention that "Carpick" meant "little carp" and was an Anglicization of an Eastern European name).hwhatting wrote:Looks like it's a corrupted or variant spelling of Karpik, which exists as a family name in Polish and means "little carp". Derivations of this word are attested as family names also in other Slavic languages, e.g. Russian Karpov (yes, the chess player).Adjective Recoil wrote:For some reason, my last name, Carpick, is very rare so far as I know; I think it's a corruption of a Slavic word. Anybody have any idea what that could be?
Re: Your Native Language
It doesn't need to be Polish - as I said, family names derived from karp "carp" exist in other Slavic languages too, and the derivation with -ik is possible in other Slavic languages as well.Adjective Recoil wrote:That's odd. I don't have any Polish ancestry that I know of (although now that I think about it, my grandpa did once mention that "Carpick" meant "little carp" and was an Anglicization of an Eastern European name).
- Nortaneous
- Sumerul

- Posts: 4544
- Joined: Mon Apr 13, 2009 1:52 am
- Location: the Imperial Corridor
Re: Your Native Language
My mother's side of the family is partially from Germany (Kaiserslautern, I think) and partially here before the revolution according to legend, which wouldn't surprise me since that side was Adventist. Also she's supposedly a direct descendant of Robert Burns, but my grandmother was 1. an attempted poet and 2. a delusional narcissist so I would not be surprised at all if she just made that up. My father's side at least had a German name, but they changed it from Rheinconsonantsomething during WWI, nobody knows where they're from, the record house apparently burned down, family lore suggests Scotland, and they're all Presbyterian, and they just so happened to change their name to something very, very Scottish. Who knows.
I can trace my mother's side back to the guy who left Germany when he was 17 (hell, we still have the prayer book he took with him), but that side is almost all dead: there's just me, my mother, and my uncle, and apparently very distant cousins in Germany who my grandmother might have talked to once. And the German side of the family... er, a lot of them died in WW2.
I can trace my mother's side back to the guy who left Germany when he was 17 (hell, we still have the prayer book he took with him), but that side is almost all dead: there's just me, my mother, and my uncle, and apparently very distant cousins in Germany who my grandmother might have talked to once. And the German side of the family... er, a lot of them died in WW2.
Siöö jandeng raiglin zåbei tandiüłåd;
nää džunnfin kukuch vklaivei sivei tåd.
Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei.
nää džunnfin kukuch vklaivei sivei tåd.
Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei.
Re: Your Native Language
That's pretty sweet. I always wondered how Danish worked in the Danish territories.johanpeturdam wrote:I speak Faroese as a native language. However, since I've been learning Danish since the age of 18 months, I probably could add that as a second native language, but in general I count it as my first foreign language.
Also, waaaaaaay back there I think I meant /ai/. I have a tendancy to mix up /ai/ and /ei/ since I've learned to many different languages which transcribe them differently. Sometimes /ai/ as <ei>, /ai/ as <ay>, etc.
Anyway, my native language is Great Lakes American English.
My ancestral languages are German (three generations ago, mainly from Hamburg on my mother's side and Aachen on my father's side) and Quebec French (five generations ago).
Re: Your Native Language
For the record, my native language and also heritage language is Spanish; and that is true of my 2 parents and 4 grandparents.
Re: Your Native Language
This feels a little necromantic considering how long ago this post was, but you wouldn't happen to be related to Gráinne Ní Mháille, would you? I did some interesting research on her in a comparative study with Cleopatra VII--the project didn't end up going anywhere, but it was very interesting.Gulliver wrote:This thread is really interesting, and I'm a bit annoyed that I'm more or less British as far back as counts*. I have documented Scottish and Irish ancestors, one or two of whom may well have spoken Gaelic (surnames like Ní Mháille would suggest so), but we're talking centuries ago. Far enough in the other direction and you get Norman French. My Welsh family don't speak any Welsh beyond numbers, dim ysmygu and "Please can I go to the toilet?" and the I never got any suggestion that my great-grandmother spoke anything other than English.
So, boo!
* Also: Finnish ettins and lesser Norse deities, but I don't think that counts.
"But if of ships I now should sing, what ship would come to me,
What ship would bear me ever back across so wide a Sea?”
What ship would bear me ever back across so wide a Sea?”
Re: Your Native Language
Native: Catalan
Heritage: Catalan, and I could count French too, since one of my grandmas and her sisters and brothers also spoke French, but not as a native language.
Heritage: Catalan, and I could count French too, since one of my grandmas and her sisters and brothers also spoke French, but not as a native language.
Un llapis mai dibuixa sense una mà.
Re: Your Native Language
Native Language: American English
Heritage Languages: Western Norwegian and East Prussian Low German (Niederpreußisch).
Go back far enough on my mom's side and I'm sure there are Old Prussian speakers.
Heritage Languages: Western Norwegian and East Prussian Low German (Niederpreußisch).
Go back far enough on my mom's side and I'm sure there are Old Prussian speakers.
Re: Your Native Language
So I've been told (and though I haven't really done any research myself, I have no reason to disbelieve it my ancestors were in the right place at the right time to make marrying her descendent not improbable).Zaarin wrote:This feels a little necromantic considering how long ago this post was, but you wouldn't happen to be related to Gráinne Ní Mháille, would you? I did some interesting research on her in a comparative study with Cleopatra VII--the project didn't end up going anywhere, but it was very interesting.
- Ghostfishe
- Sanci

- Posts: 35
- Joined: Sat Feb 19, 2011 1:09 pm
Re: Your Native Language
Native: Technically I was "brought up" speaking American English, though I've been playing European computer games and talking to English folks since I was six or seven, so a lot of "English-English" terms, spellings etc. have slipped in.
Heritage: German and Cherokee, both fairly recent. Other than that... I don't know. My mother's family isn't the sort that's very keen on family history, and my father's family's history is a gray area. Swedish or Norse, possibly? I can probably cover all the bases by just listing Cherokee and PIE.
Heritage: German and Cherokee, both fairly recent. Other than that... I don't know. My mother's family isn't the sort that's very keen on family history, and my father's family's history is a gray area. Swedish or Norse, possibly? I can probably cover all the bases by just listing Cherokee and PIE.
When I'm not dabbling in speculative science, creating game mods or writing fanfiction, I work as a web designer for www.mommatown.net.
Sites my team has made: www.vincentmartella.com, www.ipoglobalresearch.com, www.ipoboutique.com
Sites my team has made: www.vincentmartella.com, www.ipoglobalresearch.com, www.ipoboutique.com
Re: Your Native Language
Native language is Standard Swedish with a big dose of Northern Swedish words that nobody else in my general area understands.
Heritage: Well, I have mixed Slavic/Scottish features in my face but the rest is anyones guess. However, I posted a bit about my body hair awhile ago and I think that should say at least something.
Heritage: Well, I have mixed Slavic/Scottish features in my face but the rest is anyones guess. However, I posted a bit about my body hair awhile ago and I think that should say at least something.
bíí’oxúyoo wrote:I have, in order:
Dark eyes but light skin.
Almost blond hair.
Rather dark eyebrows, eye-lashes
Ash-blond beard, moustache.
Hair on on my arms that turned from blond to almost black when i entered puberty and until a few months ago, when it suddenly turned blond again.
Black hair on my legs.
... and Auburn-brown pubic hair for no fucking reason at all.![]()
Yay for mixed ancestry!
edit: I think I have touch of Scottish Ginger Beard Syndrome in my beard, though it is like one or two hair.
If I stop posting out of the blue it probably is because my computer and the board won't cooperate and let me log in.!
- johanpeturdam
- Sanci

- Posts: 36
- Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2004 9:32 pm
- Location: Bratislava, Slovakia, originally: Funningur, Faroe Islands
- Contact:
Re: Your Native Language
Actually, my parents and I moved to Denmark proper at that time, so I can't really say, how it works for other Faroese people.Viktor77 wrote:That's pretty sweet. I always wondered how Danish worked in the Danish territories.johanpeturdam wrote:I speak Faroese as a native language. However, since I've been learning Danish since the age of 18 months, I probably could add that as a second native language, but in general I count it as my first foreign language.
Ungur nemur, gamal fremur
Da giovani si impara, da adulti si applica
Da giovani si impara, da adulti si applica
Re: Your Native Language
Mær dámar føroyskt, eg royndi at læra eitt sindur. Eg hevði vitjað Havnina og onnur støð, tey vóru sera vøkur.johanpeturdam wrote:I speak Faroese as a native language. However, since I've been learning Danish since the age of 18 months, I probably could add that as a second native language, but in general I count it as my first foreign language.
My native language is BrE.
Low Pr. kalbeken < Lith. kalbėti
Lith. sūris = cheese, Fr. souris = mouse... o_O
Lith. sūris = cheese, Fr. souris = mouse... o_O
Re: Your Native Language
polychromeeeebíí’oxúyoo wrote:I have, in order:
Dark eyes but light skin.
Almost blond hair.
Rather dark eyebrows, eye-lashes
Ash-blond beard, moustache.
Hair on on my arms that turned from blond to almost black when i entered puberty and until a few months ago, when it suddenly turned blond again.
Black hair on my legs.
... and Auburn-brown pubic hair for no fucking reason at all.![]()
Yay for mixed ancestry!
edit: I think I have touch of Scottish Ginger Beard Syndrome in my beard, though it is like one or two hair.
Re: Your Native Language
Yuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuup
Apparently body hair colour can fuck up pretty badly sometimes, because just look at Alistair Darling, which supposedly got this the natural way.

Apparently body hair colour can fuck up pretty badly sometimes, because just look at Alistair Darling, which supposedly got this the natural way.

If I stop posting out of the blue it probably is because my computer and the board won't cooperate and let me log in.!
