[Facts] Gonneke
Just came across this Dutch (?) female name...does anyone know of it's meaning/origins?
Replies
Thanks everyone!
This might come across as 'shameless self-promotion' but I have a post on the writing board about Dutch names. For those of you who know about Dutch names (the usage of), you wouldn't mind helping me out, would you?
This might come across as 'shameless self-promotion' but I have a post on the writing board about Dutch names. For those of you who know about Dutch names (the usage of), you wouldn't mind helping me out, would you?
The -ke suffix is a dimunitive. I suppose Gonneke comes from a name like Hildegonda.
It's also a variant of Gonda. Other variants: Gonne, Gonnie, Gonny.
Educated guess here:
Gonneke looks like it belongs to the same "name family" as (feminine) Gonna, Gönke, Gontje, Göntje, Göntie, Gonnel and (masculine) Gonner, Gonke, Gonne, Gonn, etc. - all of which are East Frisian and North Frisian names derived from the element "gond" and ultimately from Old High German "gund", meaning "war".
Seeing as we are talking about a name here which is (presumably) used in the Netherlands, the Frisian variety you are looking for would be West Frisian (provided that it is a Frisian name in the first place); however, should this name really be of Frisian origin, I doubt that there would be any major differences regarding the meaning...
Gonneke looks like it belongs to the same "name family" as (feminine) Gonna, Gönke, Gontje, Göntje, Göntie, Gonnel and (masculine) Gonner, Gonke, Gonne, Gonn, etc. - all of which are East Frisian and North Frisian names derived from the element "gond" and ultimately from Old High German "gund", meaning "war".
Seeing as we are talking about a name here which is (presumably) used in the Netherlands, the Frisian variety you are looking for would be West Frisian (provided that it is a Frisian name in the first place); however, should this name really be of Frisian origin, I doubt that there would be any major differences regarding the meaning...
Which language does the -neke suffix hail from?
At first glance, I see |gunaikos| (Gr. "womanly").
At first glance, I see |gunaikos| (Gr. "womanly").