|   |
Thank you, Alberto for your input, I will try what you suggested. Again,
thank you
Jose Luis Macias
"Zendean"
----- Original Message -----
From: "Alberto Duarte" <albertodua@...>
To: <ranchos@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, May 07, 2005 9:46 PM
Subject: Re: [ranchos] Re: Alberto's coment Re: Argentine names
Looking for the origin of a name:
Whenever I cannot find the origin of a name, I enter
the name in google.com and ask the question: what is
the orgin of this name ..........
Most of the time I get a half decent reply that helps.
Alberto
--- zendean <usa20@...> wrote:
Alberto;
Many thanks for the comments on Italian and German
names. I can see you are probably right. I am doing
a church records of Baptisms for 1890 to 1900. It
was cleaver of you to catch that. But both comments
are of value to me because now I am more aware of
the time line for the influx of German and Italian
names starting in 1945 and later.
The names I am running accross are so unique that
they resemble a jumbled alphabet. I have been doing
genealogy extraction for over 8 years and those are
the first of this kind that I have ever seen in
hispanic counties. That is why I was hoping for a
telephone book for Argentina. I need one for Mexico
soon because I think that will be my next
assignment. For now I am trying to figure out a name
that looks like "Useberlitano" or "Vsibrlijano"
Altibucian, I think.
Thank you again.
Jose Luis Macias
-----Original Message-----
From: Alberto Duarte <albertodua@...>
Sent: May 6, 2005 8:26 PM
To: ranchos@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [ranchos] Re: Argentine names
Actually, the Germans and Italians are new arrivals.
They did not come to Argentina until the end of the
second world war. If you review the early history
of
Argentina, you will not see the many German and
Italian names you see now.
Alberto
--- readysetgo95814 <nena@...> wrote:
> Jose Luis,
>
> I know that there has been a significant number of
> Italian and
> German Immigrants in Argentina. Perhaps that's
why
> the names seem
> so different from those found in other Latin
> American countries.
> Maybe you could try looking for Italian and German
> phone books on
> the Internet? The names could've also been
changed
> by the priest to
> sound more Spanish. Like the name Lomelin was
> changed from the
> original Italian surname of Lomellini in Mexico.
> Just a thought.
>
> Maria
>
> --- In ranchos@yahoogroups.com, "zendean"
> <usa20@e...> wrote:
> > Joseph,
> > Thank you for the kind words about the work
I
> do on
> extraction. Joseph, I have a problem that I hope
> that you could
> help with. When I am doing the names on the
> records I often find
> strange names and spellings. I had a baby name
book
> for naming kids
> and I wonder if there exists such a book for
Latino
> kids. I thought
> that a phone book would help so I got one for a
> local city that has
> a lot of Hispanic families. There seems to be a
> limited number of
> first names and surnames. I need a better source.
> For example, I
> found a name that looked like "Eulalio Chuc" . I
> have never seen the
> surname "Chuc" or "Toco" or "Andurate" Moratalla.
I
> am doing a
> church in Argentina and I guess the names are
> different or I am not
> that familiar with "Oligalla Zulipata". See, I am
> not sure if such
> names exist or if I am not reading them right. If
I
> knew or had seen
> names like that, then I would recognize them like
"
> Jose", "Juan"
> or "Julio". You are a helpful person and if
> you can't think of
> a source for me on this, that is Ok because I am
no
> worse off than
> before.
> >
> > Your friend in Family Search,
> >
> > Jose Luis Macias
> > "Zendean"
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: Joseph Puentes
> > To: Ciudad_Juarez@yahoogroups.com ; LosRanchos
> > Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 4:06 PM
> > Subject: [ranchos] [Fwd: Somos Primos May 2005
> lq]
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > -------- Original Message -------- Subject:
> Somos Primos May
> 2005 lq
> > Date: Mon, 02 May 2005 17:25:40 -0400
> (EDT)
> > From: MIMILOZANO@a...
> > To: MIMILOZANO@a...
> >
> >
> > Somos Primos May 2005
> >
>
http://www.somosprimos.com/sp2005/spmay05/spmay05.htm
> >
> >
> > Hi . . Hope all are enjoying the many Cinco
de
> Mayo and other
> patriotic events being hosted all over nation.
> >
> > May 12th is the first of the 2005 Hispanic
> American events being
> held at the National Archives. (US). The
National
> Archives needs
> to know that we care about our history. Our
history
> is embedded in
> the National Archives, but the rich abundance of
> materials that
> reveal our presence has not been fully gathered
and
> indexed.
> >
> > The SHHAR quarterly meeting on May 21st will
be
> a presentation
> by UCLA Pprofessor, Dr. Guillermo Hernadez. His
> topic, the
> historical Corridos of Mexico, folk ballads of the
> people.
> >
> > DECIDED TO INCLUDE ALL THE TITLES WITHIN EACH
> FILE . . .
> >
> > UNITED STATES
> > Hispanics have a problem. .
> > National Archives, May 12th, "Hispanics,
> Education and Civil
> Rights."
> > All Gave Some, Some Gave All
> > Passing of a Generation
> > Sheriff Joe Arpaio, America's Toughest Sheriff
> > 25th Annual Lorian Hemingway Short Story
> Competition
> > 74th Annual WD Writing Competition
> > Workshop to make writers of warriors
> > "Uncover the Mind"
> > Lalo Guerrero, 'father of Chicano music
> dies
>
> > We Need You to Save Our Heritage
> > Census Bureau News Facts, Special Edition:
Cinco
> de Mayo
> > Hub race woes
> serious
>
>
> > The Values We Live By
> > Current Newsworthy Tidbits: LATINO LOOP
> > Texans seek compensation from Mexico for 12
> million acres lost
> > Illegal Immigrants Are Bolstering Social
> Security With Billions
> > Bill mandates diverse faculty
> > "Finding Cousin Tony"
=== message truncated ===
__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Small Business - Try our new resources site!
http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/resources/
Yahoo! Groups Links
|
|   |