[Facts] Re: Does Mona mean moon in Old English?
in reply to a message by Swiff
Merriam-Webster lists the following for the etymology of the English word moon:
Middle English mone, from Old English mōna; akin to Old High German māno moon, Latin mensis month, Greek mēn month, mēnē moon
(http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/moon)
So yes, it looks like Mona would mean moon in Old English, but that doesn't mean it was necessarily used in Old English as a name. :)
Array
"It's always hard to see the young ones called home, especially on an exploding thresher. It's just so odd and gross."
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.
Middle English mone, from Old English mōna; akin to Old High German māno moon, Latin mensis month, Greek mēn month, mēnē moon
(http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/moon)
So yes, it looks like Mona would mean moon in Old English, but that doesn't mean it was necessarily used in Old English as a name. :)
Array
"It's always hard to see the young ones called home, especially on an exploding thresher. It's just so odd and gross."
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.
This message was edited 1/10/2008, 11:33 AM
Replies
Thank you! :)