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Re: Meaning of Aurembiaix
I would note that during the time Aurembiaix lived (1196-1231), Old Catalan was the language spoken, not the modern Catalan from which baix could have been used (Wiktionary lists the etymology of baix itself here: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/baix - it was taken from the Late Latin word bassus). It is also entirely possible for the name to have potentially originated from name elements of the time. Aureus is still a valid Latin word, but, again, a bit of a discrepancy would be that Medieval Latin was used while Aurembiaix was alive, and was only later replaced by Renaissance Latin from the 14th century (1300s). Most sources I could find only list aureus as Latin, with no indicator as to which Latin it is from, though, so you could take that with a grain of salt. As for the connection to Myanmar and Burma in “golden land,” I think it is most likely coincidental, given that the name was used once during medieval times.And as you said, there’s also the very possible chance that Nameberry simply made a few connections to make up that meaning. I will say, it’d be very helpful if they could actually link where they got all this from, though, instead of just putting it out there with no sources.(Edited because I mistakenly used “Wikimedia” in place of “Wiktionary”)…og en god dag til deg, fra niko.

This message was edited 7/19/2023, 7:19 PM

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I should also add I’m no historian, and got most of my information through searching Wikipedia/Wiktionary, so if I got something wrong here, I’m open to disagreements and civil debate.(Edited because I mistakenly used “Wikimedia” in place of “Wiktionary”)

This message was edited 7/19/2023, 7:19 PM

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