This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Thurgood
I think the English "thorough'good" theory carries the most water.I find it difficult to believe it is from Germanic "Thor" & "god," the combination seems so unlikely.
vote up1vote down

Replies

It maybe comes from Old Norse Torgot/Thorgot which comes from the name Torgaut/Thorgaut (Icelandic: Þorgautur), which means Tor/Thor (god) + the tribal name of the Goths.Germanic names do not always make sense as very many of them were composed when the actual meaning had become unimportant. Sometimes children were named after their parents names like this:father: Hildebrand (battle + sword)
mother: Gertrud (spear + strength)sons: Gerbrand - Trudbrand - Hildger - Brandger - Trudger
daughters: Hiltrud - Brandtrud - Gerhild - Brandhild - TrudhildSo some combinations (like spear + sword) did not make much sense anymore.Later, non-Germanic name parts were mixed with Germanic parts like e.g.
Sigbritt (Germanic victory + Britt, which is a form of Celtic Brighid) or Gerlis (Germanic spear + Lis which is a short form of Hebrew Elisabeth).Satu
vote up1vote down