Old Mangeodge names

There were two concurrent naming systems within Old Mangeodge, that of the Mangeodge of Meilvarestu and of the Etjarutr Hybrids, the former being the older system. In both systems an individual has a first name and a surname but the difference is in how these are formed.

In the older Meilvarestu system the names centre heavily on the land due to the strong association the Mangeodge have with their nation. First names are always animate nouns that have been derived from inanimate nouns pertaining to earth, plants or the landscape: An individual may be named after another person of the opposite sex by switching the animate -i to the feminine animate -ja or vice versa: Surnames are non-hereditary and are forrmed from the place the individual was born with the preposition jar (“from, of”):
 * Aulevi (“stone”) > Aulei
 * Einvi (“valley”) > Einja (“female name”)
 * Aulei > Auleja
 * Einja > Eini
 * Aulei jar Rudjall (the full name of King Aulei)
 * Belarja jar Ejozanu

The naming system used by the Etjarutr is quite different. After The Cleansing War where they experienced genocide under King Aulei they were uprooted and expelled from Meilvarestu, breaking their connection to the land. So rather than basing their names off the land, their first names reflected their religious side with many coming from 1st person perfect verbs and the words ori (“god”) or orja (“goddess”): However some older names have survived, usually ones with relevant associations, for example Belari, Belarja (< belarvi “sky”) is popular among those whose alternate forms have wings.
 * Auasori (“god, I have recognised”) < auas (“I have recognised” < auti “to recognise”)
 * Veikasori (“god, I have repelled”) < veikas (“I have repelled” < veikti “to repel”)
 * Bleisorja (“godsess, I have revealed myself”) < bleis (“I have revealled myself” < blati “to reveal one’s self”)

Surnames are hereditary, with men taking their father’s name as a patrynomic and women taking their mother’s name as a matrynomic. These are formed with the suffixes -jeisi (for men) and -jeisja (for women). The animate endings on the names are removed before the suffixes:
 * Bleisorja > Bleisorjeisja (“daughter of Bleisorja”)
 * Belari > Belarjeisi (“son of Belari”)

=A=
 * Askeii (“thistle”)
 * Aulei (“rock”)
 * Auasori (“god, I have recognised”)

=B=
 * Belari (“sky”)
 * Beovcalasori (“god, I have raided”)
 * Bleisori (“god, I have revealed myself”)

=C=
 * Capesui (“tree bark”)
 * Cgasei (“gem”)
 * Cgeiasori (“god, I have cheered soneone up”)
 * Cgejosi (“tide”)

=D=
 * Dacgavei (“sand”)
 * Dani (“cliff”)

=E=
 * Eini (“valley”)

=J=
 * Jieii (“bridge”)

=L=
 * Leii (“meadow”)

=T=
 * Tjarugosi ("meaning not apparent")

=V=
 * Vabukasorja (“goddess, I have defined”)
 * Valeja (“lilly”)
 * Veicesoi (“puddle”)
 * Veikasori (“god, I have repelled”)