Joined: 11/22/2004
Posts: 1468
Location: Rotterdam, The Netherlands
I'm a (somewhat) active Wikipedia contributor. I edit various articles, mostly related to technology and games. There's one article that I've edited extensively, which is the Speedrun article that I want to bring up to featured article status (but isn't quite there yet; see the discussion page in case you want to help out!) So what about you guys? I know there are some active contributors, but where can I find your userpages? Let's keep a list of the editors that also visit this site.
Joined: 11/11/2004
Posts: 400
Location: ::1
I'm an editor, but nowhere near as active as I used to be. (Please excuse the cluttered user page, BTW - I'm a terrible packrat^H^H^Hwolf. :))
Former player
Joined: 5/31/2004
Posts: 375
I'm an addict, although I spend far more time reading than I do any major editing.
Joined: 3/6/2006
Posts: 15
Location: Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
I have contributed to a few articles, but I mostly read. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:TigerTjäder
Editor, Reviewer, Experienced player (969)
Joined: 4/17/2004
Posts: 3109
Location: Sweden
I have to ask TigerTjäder... how come you say your first language is Portugese, others English and Spanish, but you have a user name which can only be interpreted in Swedish (as far as I can see)?
Former player
Joined: 3/13/2004
Posts: 1118
Location: Kansai, JAPAN
Most of my "work" on Wikipedia is fighting vandalism. I wish I could do something more constructive, but I don't have much else to add to most pages. I suppose somebody needs to clean up after all those prank edits...
Do Not Talk About Feitclub http://www.feitclub.com
Active player (278)
Joined: 5/29/2004
Posts: 5712
I can't believe you would think all those references to the YTMND time traveler are unnecessary!
put yourself in my rocketpack if that poochie is one outrageous dude
Joined: 3/6/2006
Posts: 15
Location: Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
Truncated wrote:
I have to ask TigerTjäder... how come you say your first language is Portugese, others English and Spanish, but you have a user name which can only be interpreted in Swedish (as far as I can see)?
Well, I'm Brazilian, I write and read English pretty well, have a little understanding of Spanish, and Tjäder is my surname, of Swedish origin. And my middle name is Exterckötter, of German origin. And, no, my first name is not Tiger, it's Rodrigo.
Editor, Reviewer, Experienced player (969)
Joined: 4/17/2004
Posts: 3109
Location: Sweden
Excuse me for saying it, but that has to be the weirdest name I've ever seen. :) Do you know what a Tjäder is in Swedish, even though you don't speak it? Hint: bottom right
Joined: 3/6/2006
Posts: 15
Location: Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
Truncated wrote:
Excuse me for saying it, but that has to be the weirdest name I've ever seen. :) Do you know what a Tjäder is in Swedish, even though you don't speak it? Hint: bottom right
Yeah, my name is very weird, even more in Portuguese, no one can pronounce it in the right way without proper instructions :p and some persons can't pronounce it even with the proper instructions =p. And yes, I already knew what it means. :) (Though I don't know what Exterckötter means, and it may be spelled wrong, as my uncle's name is spelled Exterkotter, and some other persons in the family have Exterchotter and other things like that, so it probably got corrupted somewere in time... but I think the right way is Exterkotter, because I've heard that it's a fusion of the families Exter and Kotter, and I've found some info on those.)
Joined: 11/11/2004
Posts: 400
Location: ::1
TigerTjäder wrote:
And yes, I already knew what it means. :) (Though I don't know what Exterckötter means, and it may be spelled wrong, as my uncle's name is spelled Exterkotter, and some other persons in the family have Exterchotter and other things like that, so it probably got corrupted somewere in time... but I think the right way is Exterkotter, because I've heard that it's a fusion of the families Exter and Kotter, and I've found some info on those.)
None of these (Exterckötter, Exterkotter, Exterchotter) give even so much as a single hit when you search for German websites mentioning them on Google. o.o I'm not aware of "Exter" or "Kotter" as surnames, either (although that of course doesn't mean they don't exist). Are you sure it's German?
Joined: 3/6/2006
Posts: 15
Location: Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
schneelocke wrote:
TigerTjäder wrote:
And yes, I already knew what it means. :) (Though I don't know what Exterckötter means, and it may be spelled wrong, as my uncle's name is spelled Exterkotter, and some other persons in the family have Exterchotter and other things like that, so it probably got corrupted somewere in time... but I think the right way is Exterkotter, because I've heard that it's a fusion of the families Exter and Kotter, and I've found some info on those.)
None of these (Exterckötter, Exterkotter, Exterchotter) give even so much as a single hit when you search for German websites mentioning them on Google. o.o I'm not aware of "Exter" or "Kotter" as surnames, either (although that of course doesn't mean they don't exist). Are you sure it's German?
Yes I am, my greatgrandfather or greatgreatgrandfather or something like that came from Germany a lot of years ago, and on my grandfather's house there's two papers from an surname researching foundation about the family Exter and the family Kotter, with the family coat of arms, a bit of the family history, etc.
Player (24)
Joined: 4/23/2005
Posts: 435
Location: Germany
Must be some rare names in Germany. Because I life in Germany and was born here. But I never hear from these names or see them anywhere. And they don't sound german. But I can't know all names which exist in Germany.
Last TAS finished: Final Fantasy Adventure (4.0 Warp Glitch Run) WIP in the moment: Tail Gator (GB) Matty
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Joined: 8/15/2004
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Location: Minnesota
I've only created one page and have done some anonymous editing before. I mostly just like to browse useless facts.
Joined: 11/11/2004
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MattyXB wrote:
Must be some rare names in Germany. Because I life in Germany and was born here. But I never hear from these names or see them anywhere. And they don't sound german. But I can't know all names which exist in Germany.
"Exter" could be the German version of the Russian surname "Экстер", I think. "Kotter" or "Kötter" seem to be German surnames after all - maybe related to these?
Joined: 3/6/2006
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Location: Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
Joined: 11/11/2004
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TigerTjäder wrote:
Places of origin for surname Exter http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/Fact.aspx?ln=Exter&fn=&fid=5 Places of origin for surname Kotter http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/Fact.aspx?ln=Kotter&fn=&fid=5
Interesting, but they unfortunately don't tell you where the surnames actually come from (both in terms of meaning and geographical origin), just where people with those surnames immigrating into the USA lived before doing that. :)
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schneelocke wrote:
"Exter" could be the German version of the Russian surname "Экстер", I think.
Eh? Экстер can't originate from Russian, it doesn't even sound alike. Most of the russian surnames end with -ов/-ова (-ov/-ova), -ев/-ева (-ev/-eva) or -ин/-ина (-in/-ina), and a significant part of them originate from one of the common russian first names (Ivan -> Ivanov). I.e. my surname is Сергеев, transliterated as "Sergeev" or, which is more accurate, "Sergeyev"; it originates from the first name Сергей (Sergey). Sometimes you can see strange russian surnames which originate from certain russian words, but that's pretty uncommon. The pattern descripted above is right in about 95% of cases.
Warp wrote:
Edit: I think I understand now: It's my avatar, isn't it? It makes me look angry.
Joined: 11/11/2004
Posts: 400
Location: ::1
moozooh wrote:
schneelocke wrote:
"Exter" could be the German version of the Russian surname "Экстер", I think.
Eh? Экстер can't originate from Russian, it doesn't even sound alike. Most of the russian surnames end with -ов/-ова (-ov/-ova), -ев/-ева (-ev/-eva) or -ин/-ина (-in/-ina), and a significant part of them originate from one of the common russian first names (Ivan -> Ivanov). I.e. my surname is Сергеев, transliterated as "Sergeev" or, which is more accurate, "Sergeyev"; it originates from the first name Сергей (Sergey). Sometimes you can see strange russian surnames which originate from certain russian words, but that's pretty uncommon. The pattern descripted above is right in about 95% of cases.
Mmm. May be, too - I'm not an expert on Russian names. I just happened to remember that there was a Russian painter of that name (Александра Экстер / Alexandra Exter). ^_~
Joined: 3/6/2006
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Location: Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
schneelocke wrote:
moozooh wrote:
schneelocke wrote:
"Exter" could be the German version of the Russian surname "Экстер", I think.
Eh? Экстер can't originate from Russian, it doesn't even sound alike. Most of the russian surnames end with -ов/-ова (-ov/-ova), -ев/-ева (-ev/-eva) or -ин/-ина (-in/-ina), and a significant part of them originate from one of the common russian first names (Ivan -> Ivanov). I.e. my surname is Сергеев, transliterated as "Sergeev" or, which is more accurate, "Sergeyev"; it originates from the first name Сергей (Sergey). Sometimes you can see strange russian surnames which originate from certain russian words, but that's pretty uncommon. The pattern descripted above is right in about 95% of cases.
Mmm. May be, too - I'm not an expert on Russian names. I just happened to remember that there was a Russian painter of that name (Александра Экстер / Alexandra Exter). ^_~
Couldn't be that painter a russian with german ancestry? Ok, I'm german and swedish descendant. Can anyone guess my hair's color?
Joined: 11/11/2004
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TigerTjäder wrote:
Couldn't be that painter a russian with german ancestry?
Yes, of course - although "ancestry" is a relatively elastic term - if somebody's family is originally from $COUNTRY, what keeps you from digging even deeper until you find out that at some point, they immigrated from $OTHER_COUNTRY? And so on, ad infinitum (almost)... In a related question, what makes a certain name a "German" name or a "Russian" name or anything like that?
Ok, I'm german and swedish descendant. Can anyone guess my hair's color?
Brown?
Player (36)
Joined: 9/11/2004
Posts: 2624
I vote Red. Blood Red.
Build a man a fire, warm him for a day, Set a man on fire, warm him for the rest of his life.
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>In a related question, what makes a certain name a "German" name or a "Russian" name or anything like that? As opposed to being an imported name? Fitting into the language's morphology as moozooh said is probably a good start. If the meaning of the name is unintelligible to a native speaker of that language, that's also a good pointer. (But this requirement doesn't fit well with first (personal) names and I can't really say why.) Also, we are horribly off-topic and it's my fault. Sorry.
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Truncated wrote:
>In a related question, what makes a certain name a "German" name or a "Russian" name or anything like that?
I think what matters where the name originated.
Truncated wrote:
Also, we are horribly off-topic and it's my fault. Sorry.
Take a look at the name of this forum.
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>Take a look at the name of this forum. Take a look at the name of this thread. :P