#ethiopianism
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oh my god whattttt
#congrats on the ethiopian wolf for being the. 4th (?) carnivora pollinator#i dont know why this got me so bad im just chuffed by it
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A Rare Sight
An Ethiopian wolf sits among purple flowers in Ethiopia’s Bale Mountains National Park.
by Axel Gomille
Wildlife Photographer of the Year People’s Choice Award
#axel gomille#photographer#ethiopian fox#fox#animal#mammal#wildlife#wildlife photographer of the year people's choice award#nature#bale mountains national park#ethiopia
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"Presence" by Yeabtsega Getachew
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Naming International POC Characters: Do Your Research.
This post is part of a double feature for the same ask. First check out Mod Colette's answer to OP's original question at: A Careful Balance: Portraying a Black Character's Relationship with their Hair. Below are notes on character naming from Mod Rina.
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@writingraccoon said:
My character is black in a dungeons and dragons-like fantasy world. His name is Kazuki Haile (pronounced hay-lee), and his mother is this world's equivalent of Japanese, which is where his first name is from, while his father is this world's equivalent of Ethiopian, which is where his last name is from. He looks much more like his father, and has hair type 4a. [...]
Hold on a sec.
Haile (pronounced hay-lee), [...] [H]is father is this world’s equivalent of Ethiopian, which is where his last name is from.
OP, where did you get this name? Behindthename.com, perhaps?
Note how it says, “Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. Check marks indicate the level to which a name has been verified.” Do you see any check marks, OP?
What language is this, by the way? If we only count official languages, Ethiopia has 5: Afar, Amharic, Oromo, Somali, & Tigrinya. If we count everything native to that region? Over 90 languages. And I haven't even mentioned the dormant/extinct ones. Do you know which language this name comes from? Have you determined Kazuki’s father’s ethnic group, religion, and language(s)? Do you know just how ethnically diverse Ethiopia is?
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To All Looking for Character Names on the Internet:
Skip the name aggregators and baby name lists. They often do not cite their sources, even if they’re pulling from credible ones, and often copy each other.
If you still wish to use a name website, find a second source that isn’t a name website.
Find at least one real life individual, living or dead, who has this given name or surname. Try Wikipedia’s lists of notable individuals under "List of [ethnicity] people." You can even try searching Facebook! Pay attention to when these people were born for chronological accuracy/believability.
Make sure you know the language the name comes from, and the ethnicity/culture/religion it’s associated with.
Make sure you understand the naming practices of that culture—how many names, where they come from, name order, and other conventions.
Make sure you have the correct pronunciation of the name. Don’t always trust Wikipedia or American pronunciation guides on Youtube. Try to find a native speaker or language lesson source, or review the phonology & orthography and parse out the string one phoneme at a time.
Suggestions for web sources:
Wikipedia! Look for: “List of [language] [masculine/feminine] given names,” “List of most common [language] family names,” “List of most common surnames in [continent],” and "List of [ethnicity] people."
Census data! Harder to find due to language barriers & what governments make public, but these can really nail period accuracy. This may sound obvious, but look at the year of the character's birth, not the year your story takes place.
Forums and Reddit. No really. Multicultural couples and expats will often ask around for what to name their children. There’s also r/namenerds, where so many folks have shared names in their language that they now have “International Name Threads.” These are all great first-hand sources for name connotations—what’s trendy vs. old-fashioned, preppy vs. nerdy, or classic vs. overused vs. obscure.
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Luckily for OP, I got very curious and did some research. More on Ethiopian & Eritrean naming, plus mixed/intercultural naming and my recommendations for this character, under the cut. It's really interesting, I promise!
Ethiopian and Eritrean Naming Practices
Haile (IPA: /həjlə/ roughly “hy-luh.” Both a & e are /ə/, a central “uh” sound) is a phrase meaning “power of” in Ge’ez, sometimes known as Classical Ethiopic, which is an extinct/dormant Semitic language that is now used as a liturgical language in Ethiopian churches (think of how Latin & Sanskrit are used today). So it's a religious name, and was likely popularized by the regnal name of the last emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie (“Power of the Trinity”). Ironically, for these reasons it is about as nationalistically “Ethiopian” as a name can get.
Haile is one of the most common “surnames” ever in Ethiopia and Eritrea. Why was that in quotes? Because Ethiopians and Eritreans don’t have surnames. Historically, when they needed to distinguish themselves from others with the same given name, they affixed their father’s given name, and then sometimes their grandfather’s. In modern Ethiopia and Eritrea, their given name is followed by a parent’s (usually father’s) name. First-generation diaspora abroad may solidify this name into a legal “surname” which is then consistently passed down to subsequent generations.
Intercultural Marriages and Naming
This means that Kazuki’s parents will have to figure out if there will be a “surname” going forward, and who it applies to. Your easiest and most likely option is that Kazuki’s dad would have chosen to make his second name (Kazuki’s grandpa’s name) the legal “surname.” The mom would have taken this name upon marriage, and Kazuki would inherit it also. Either moving abroad or the circumstances of the intercultural marriage would have motivated this. Thus “Haile” would be grandpa’s name, and Kazuki wouldn’t be taking his “surname” from his dad. This prevents the mom & Kazuki from having different “surnames.” But you will have to understand and explain where the names came from and the decisions dad made to get there. Otherwise, this will ring culturally hollow and indicate a lack of research.
Typically intercultural parents try to
come up with a first name that is pronounceable in both languages,
go with a name that is the dominant language of where they live, or
compromise and pick one parent’s language, depending on the circumstances.
Option 1 and possibly 3 requires figuring out which language is the father’s first language. Unfortunately, because of the aforementioned national ubiquity of Haile, you will have to start from scratch here and figure out his ethnic group, religion (most are Ethiopian Orthodox and some Sunni Muslim), and language(s).
But then again, writing these characters knowledgeably and respectfully also requires figuring out that information anyway.
~ ~ ~
Names and naming practices are so, so diverse. Do research into the culture and language before picking a name, and never go with only one source.
~ Mod Rina
#asks#language#languages#linguistics#east africa#african#immigration#ethiopian#names#naming#research#resources#writeblr#character names#character name ideas#rina says read under the cut. read it
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Nafisa 🌻
#@itsfisaaa#africa#ethiopians#eastafrica#curlygirl#blackisbeautiful#blackbeauty#blackandbeautiful#blackwomanmagic#blackwomen#habesha#habeshagirl#habeshabeauty#blackwomenaredivine#ethiopia#east african beauty#african heritage#africanwomen#africanbeauty#african ancestry#africamatters#afrocentrism#blackgirlmagic#blackgirlaesthetic#black joy#blackpride#blackpower#blacktumblr
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Hidden History
#ethiopia_war#history#blackhistoryfacts#african history#african american#black history#african america history#black lives matter#blacklivesmatter#ethiopia#africa#war#ethiopian#black people#black unity#black pride#black liberation#banned history#haile selassie#racial injustice#italy
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An Ethiopian hedgehog or desert hedgehog (Paraechinus aethiopicus) rests in a garden in the United Arab Emirates
by Priscilla van Andel
#desert hedgehog#ethiopian hedgehog#hedgehogs#paraechinus aethiopicus#paraechinus#Erinaceidae#Eulipotyphla#Mammalia#chordata#animalia#wildlife: UAE#wildlife: asia
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#orthodoxy#orthodox christianity#orthodox#christianity#eastern orthodoxy#orthodox church#eastern orthodox#orthodox christian#church#greek orthodox#russian orthodox#serbian orthodox#ethiopian orthodox
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Pollinators come in a variety of forms. While people tend to be most familiar with bees and butterflies, there are numerous other animals from beetles to birds to bats--and now wolves--that also facilitate the pollination of various plants.
This, to me, just illustrates yet again why the removal of even one native species from the ecosystem it evolved in can have wide-ranging repercussions. While we are continuing to learn all sorts of amazing ways that species depend on each other, we've barely scratched the surface of what there is to know.
At a time when extinction is accelerating due to factors ranging from habitat loss and fragmentation to invasive species to the ever-expanding effects of anthropogenic climate change, it is even more crucial that we protect all extant species, even those that are not as charismatic or high-profile. When we lose a species forever, the ecosystem loses all the benefits that species provided--and we lose the opportunity to learn about those complex relationships.
While those responsible for the greatest amount of damage are largely concerned with next quarter's profits and what they can milk out of "natural resources" before they disappear, those of us intimately acquainted with the workings of the natural world know that there is much more value to all of us in preserving and restoring as much of our planet's natural systems as possible, not merely for abstract understanding of natural history, but the ongoing maintenance of every living being's life support system.
#nature#natural history#wolves#Ethiopian wolves#pollinators#plants#zoology#botany#ecology#endangered species#extinction#wildlife#animals#environment#conservation#science#scicomm#canids#Canidae#canines
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Ethiopian Christians devotees, Ethiopia, by Africa Online Museum
#ethiopian#ethiopia#africa#folk clothing#traditional clothing#traditional fashion#cultural clothing#eastern africa
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Church of St. George, Lalibela, Ethiopia: The Church of Saint George is one of eleven rock-hewn monolithic churches in Lalibela, a town in the Amhara Region of Ethiopia. Originally named Roha, the historical and religious site was named Lalibela after the King Gebre Mesqel Lalibela of the Zagwe dynasty, who commissioned its construction. Wikipedia
#Church of St. George#Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church#rock-hewn church#Monolithic church#North Wollo Zone#Amhara Region#Ethiopia#Lalibela#africa#african continent
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Two Beta Israel (Ethiopian Jewish) men rejoice during Simchat Torah. x
#beta israel#ethiopian jews#ביתא ישראל#simchat torah#shemini atzeret#judaism#ישראבלר#שמחת תורה#שמיני עצרת
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Angete Brlie by Abemelek Abebe
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#blackisbeautiful#ethiopian beauty#ethiopia#amhara culture#amharic people#habesha#blackwomen#blackbeauty#blackwomanmagic#blackwomenaredivine#blackwomenarestunning#african culture#blackandbeautiful#cultural practices#cultural heritage#cultural photoshoot#african heritage#african diaspora#africa#africanwomen#africanbeauty#african ancestry#africamatters#afrocentrism#blackgirlmagic#black people#blackgirlaesthetic#black joy#blackpride#blacktumblr
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