Stoffsammlung:
- Wohl von lat. sonare, sonabam = ich tönte oder ich habe getönt.
Allerdings will sich mir der Sinn dieser Aussage bisher nicht zu erkennen geben. Ortskundige Unterstützung erforderlich, da zudem auch die Lage unbekannt ist.
- Quelle Buck: Sane, Sone, ein uraltes dunkles Wort. Wir kennen ahd. son = Schweineherde von 5 Schweinemüttern und einem Eber
- ... sunor = Herde,
- ht tp://www.tara.tcd.ie/bitstream/2262/3921/1/jssisiVolXII263_294.pdf
SHAN.—SHAN figures very, numerously as a prefix to Townland names, there being over 400 such cases in the Index. It is an anglicised form of the Irish sean, " old," " ancient/' as Shanbally, sean baile, " old town." The word sean is also found in the Gaelic of Scotland, as in Shantir sean tir, " old land " Ayrshire, and in Manx in the form shenn, as Shenvalla, " old farm.
- Quelle wie vor:
BAWN, BAUN.—The word BAWN or BAUN is very frequently found in the composition of Irish place names in the Index. As the first syllable of the name it is usually from the Irish ban, " a field/' as Bawnluskaha, ban loisgthe, " burned field." At the end of a word it is usually from ban, " white," as Glenbaun, gleann ban, " white glen or valley." There are 16 Townlands called BAWN, and about 90 others where it forms the initial syllable of the name. In Scottish Gaelic the word ban, meaning " white" appears, as Drumbane, " white ridge" Stirlingshire. In Manx the word is bane, as Knockbane, " white hill." Compare Welsh ban,
Internetsuchbegriff: ? sonnen
Namenshäufigkeit: 85129 Oberdolling, 85132 Schernfeld, 91472 Ipsheim, 91613 Marktbergel, 91798 Höttingen, 92364 Deining
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