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Re: Paloma (and an apology for last Friday's Maurice thread)
in reply to a message by Bear
That's true, and sometimes I don't even think I like a name until I hear it on a real person and then it can change my mind. That happened with Crispin not too long ago.Sedemaiden is from Old English Sidumægden or Seodumægden. Sidu = "custom, manner", mægden = "maiden," according to my findings.I think Paloma Dulcie can work. Paloma is strong and not too sweet, so she can take it. Although I'm not so sure it's dulce de leche as much as a bird stuck in syrup. Ha... hmmm.
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O.K. You fixed the hunger problem with the bird stuck in syrup. lolSedemaiden is going on my long list right now. "Custom / manner maiden." does that mean she's a well mannered young woman? I just love the "-maiden" part of it. So much imagery. I'm pronouncing it with four syllables, "Sed-uh-may-den." Do you know if that's correct, or even close? Thanks!

This message was edited 6/20/2011, 11:35 AM

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Attn: Pie?Pie must be my new go-to for Old English questions. :) So if she reads this, maybe she will know better how it should be pronounced.I'm not entirely sure how to say it. I've been saying it more like seed-uh-MAY-den (the second syllable being hardly noticeable), but the way you're saying it probably makes more sense.
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yo :)that doesn't look like an OE spelling to me, but assuming it's a fairly temporally close derivation, from what I remember, OE names are usually accented on the first syllable and I think the e sound is something like the e in get. (of course all OE pronunciation is a complete guessing game anyway. but the guesses do try to be scholarly!)
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Thanks for the input! The Old English form it said was Sidumægden or Seodumægden, if that helps. I guess Sedemaiden might be more Middle English? It was a name that was recorded as given in England in 1095. Actually next to the entry it says "Seed," and those little notes have often seemed to be pronunciation things. Hmm.
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