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Dallin, and other "valley" names
Does Dallin really mean "from the valley?" What about Dalen? If not is there another name with this meaning?Also I'm interested in knowing if there is a name that means "valley walker," or something to that effect. Or if a name is not in existence, what name components I might use to create one for a character (preferably in Germanic or Celtic languages).If there are any other names containing the meaning 'valley' that are not listed on this site, I'd love to hear them.

This message was edited 3/12/2020, 2:47 AM

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Locational names are more common as surnames than as given names, "Thaler" (German) or "Valle" (Italian and Spanish) come to my mind here.For a given name, look at Percival that captures your intended meaning pretty well. If you want a made-up Germanic name, I suggest Dalegang or Dalgang, made of dale "valley" and gang "walk, march".--elbowin
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true, a name like Dalgangr would be an epithet rather than a "name", like Longshanks, Bluetooth etc. As far as Germanic and even Celtic personal "names" I don't know any elements that mean valley. Several that mean hill, island or mountain, but not valley. They really went for fortifiable or holy places, and that was always up on the hills, not in the valleys. There are some that might be construed as "river" though, but that probably wasn't the intent.

This message was edited 3/15/2020, 7:22 AM

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QuoteAs far as Germanic and even Celtic personal "names" I don't know any elements that mean valley.
There is Proto-Germanic *dalą or *dalaz meaning "valley, dale", the descendants of which you can see here:https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/dal%C4%85#Descendants (in English)There are some recently created names with its Icelandic descendant in Iceland, which you can see here:https://www.nordicnames.de/wiki/DAL#Combinations (in English)It appears that in older times, none of the descendants of Proto-Germanic *dalą or *dalaz were used in given names. At least, Altdeutsches Namenbuch by Ernst Förstemann (which contains nearly all West Germanic given names used in the medieval period) makes no mention of it. It does list the element DALA on page 399, but indicates that it should be related to the Anglo-Saxon adjective deall meaning "clarus, superbus" in Latin.https://archive.org/details/altdeutschesnam00seelgoog/page/n213/mode/2up (in German)
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Did you already check meaning search on this site here? http://www.behindthename.com/names/meaning/valleyMy own "valley" page has less: http://www.babynames.ch/Info/Word/woValley
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