They are capped out at 12 competitors, pairs have four per group.Oh. There are more pairs? I thought the discipline are capped out at 2 groups.
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They are capped out at 12 competitors, pairs have four per group.Oh. There are more pairs? I thought the discipline are capped out at 2 groups.
Yes, they are closely related. Walt - and Vlad - are variants of the Indo-Germanic root, both meaning "rule, possess". The second element in Walter is Har-, meaning warrior. So Walter is someone who rules the army. In Vladimir the second element is Mir, meaning world. So Vladimir means someone who rules the world.i don't know the sequence VLD/Wld looks similar but my linguistic studies are too rusty by now
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Well I definitely didn't find that when I searchedYes, they are closely related. Walt - and Vlad - are variants of the Indo-Germanic root, both meaning "rule, possess". The second element in Walter is Har-, meaning warrior. So Walter is someone who rules the army. In Vladimir the second element is Mir, meaning world. So Vladimir means someone who rules the world.
In pagan times old Slavic names were of two types: common people got names from everyday life, nature, etc. Nobility got those compound names with two roots, Vladimir, Miroslav, (Slav- glory), etc. After the advent of Christianity names from the church calendar replaced the pre-Christian ones. The common names were completely ousted. However, some names of nobility were later included into the church calendar because the Christian church accepted some of the dukes and princes of the pagan times as Christian saints (Vladimir, Olga). Other names (Svetlana, from svet - light) were not included, so one still can't baptize a girl with that name.


also Davis/Smolkin (who probably will win)Ice dance should be good with Rumak/Goncharov and Kaganovskaya/Angelopol!
You are welcome. Looking for origins of words, just add "etymology" to your search, it will give you links to special dictionaries. (If you already knew that, please bear with me - professional distortionWell I definitely didn't find that when I searched
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I wish I had £1.00 everytime Ilya is mentioned in connection with ice cream. I'd be filthy rich by now!in your name! Ilya Yablokov!![]()

They're good (and they might as well win), but tbh, they're not for me.also Davis/Smolkin (who probably will win)
I do, and I enjoy linguistics, but my knowledge of how names historically relate is still pretty shallowYou are welcome. Looking for origins of words, just add "etymology" to your search, it will give you links to special dictionaries. (If you already knew that, please bear with me - professional distortion)
