baelor:

🌟 i randomly spent all day making a masterpost of the non-East Asian names in Avatar 🌟

ASIA

These are all real, common, well-known names and words with widely available translations.

Inner Asia

Tibetan names:

  • Gyatso (རྒྱ་མཚོ།) – “ocean”
  • Pema (པདྨ།) – “lotus flower”
  • Tenzin (བསྟན་འཛིན) – “upholder of the Dharma” or “defender of the faith”
  • Yangchen (དབྱངས་ཅན།) – Tibetan translation of Sanskrit “Saraswati”, the Hindu goddess of knowledge, music, arts, wisdom and nature

Mongolian names:

  • Baatar (ᠪᠠᠭᠠᠲᠦᠷ (baγatur) / баатар (baatar)) – “hero”
  • Mongke (ᠮᠥᠩᠬᠡ (möngke) / mөнх (mönkh)) – “eternal”
  • Ogodei (ᠥᠭᠡᠳᠡᠢ (Ögedei) / Өгэдэй (Ögedei)) – unknown meaning
  • Saikhan (сайхан (saikhan)) – “beautiful”, “handsome”

Khitan names:

  • Yeh-Lu (yelü / 耶律 (Yēlǜ)) – unknown meaning

Central Asia

Uzbek names:

  • Yulduz – “star”

South Asia

Sanskrit names:

  • Bumi (भूमिः (bhūmiḥ)) – “earth”
  • Avatar (अवतारः

    (avatāraḥ)) – “descent”

  • Raava (रवः

    (ravaḥ)) – “sound”

  • Vaatu (वतु

    (vatu)) – “silence”

Hindi-Urdu names:

  • Kuvira (कुविरा) – “courageous woman”
  • Pathik (पथिक) – “traveler”
  • Rohan (रोहण) – “ascension”

NORTH AMERICA

Most of the Water Tribe names are made up. Only a few are for-sure legit and verifiable like Noatak which is a real place in Alaska with an Inupiaq name.

Some are listed on sketchy baby name sites (and a lot of dog name sites which seems really racist…) and I included these in square brackets meaning take them with a big grain of salt.

I also found some similar-sounding words in Inuttut, an Inuit dialect spoken in Nunatsiavut (from this museum dictionary), that seem to have similar etymologies. I included those, along with other similarities, in curly brackets.

Also, I transliterated all the names into the Inuktitut script, which is only used in Nunavut and Nunavik in Canada, but I thought it would be fun to do it for all of them anyway.

Northern North America

Inuit-Yupik names:

  • Arnook (ᐊᕐᓄᒃ (arnuk)) _OR_ (ᐊᕐᓇᖅ (arnaq)) – “woman”
  • Eska (ᐁᔅᑲ (eska/aiska)) – a creek in southern Alaska
  • Desna (ᑌᔅᓇ (desna/taisna)) – [“boss”]
  • Iknik (ᐃᒃᓂᒃ (iknik))
  • Kuruk (ᑯᕈᒃ (kuruk)) – a creek in northern Alaska, see also possible Pawnee etymology
  • Kya (ᑳᔭ (kaaya)) _OR_ (ᑲᔭ (kaya)) – [“stay”]
  • Malina (ᒪᓕᓇ (Malina)) – an Inuit sun goddess
  • Maliq (ᒪᓕᖅ (maliq)) _OR_ (

    ᒪᓕᒃ (malik)) – “follow” in Inupiaq, [“wave” in Greenlandic]

  • Naga (ᓈᒐ (naaga)) _OR_ (ᓇᒐ (naga)) – “no”
  • Noatak (ᓄᐊᑖᖅ (nuataaq)) – a community in northern Alaska, [“river that provides food for the people”]
  • Pakku (ᐹᒃᑯ (paakku)) – {pakkujak – “candle”}, {pakkak – “melt”}, {pakkâk – “heat”}
  • Sangok (ᓵᖕᒑᖅ (saanggaaq)) _OR_ (ᓭᖕᒑᖅ

    (senggaaq/sainggaaq)) _OR_ (ᓴᓐᒍᒃ (sangok/sanguk))

  • Senna (ᓭᓐᓇ (senna/sainna)) – {sennasaut – “sour ingredient”, “spice”}, {sennâluk – “rhubarb”}, {sennatuk – “sour”, “vinegar”} _OR_ (ᓴᓐᓇ (Sanna)) – the Inuit goddess of the sea
  • Sokka (ᓴᒃᑲ (saakka)) _OR_ (ᓱᑲ (soka/suka)) – [“fast”]
  • Tarrlok (ᑖᕐᓛᖅ (taarlaaq)) _OR_ (ᑕᕐᓗᒃ (tarlok/tarluk))
  • Tonraq (ᐋᓐᕌᖅ (taanraaq))

    _OR_ (ᑐᓐᕌᖅ (tonraaq/tunraaq))

    – [“a spirit or ghost”], {tonngak – “evil spirit” or “spirit used by shaman”}, {tunngak – “ruling spirit”}, {tannik – “soul”}

  • Ummi (ᐆᒻᒥ (uummi)) _OR_ (ᐅᒥ (umi)) – “ship”, “boat”
  • Unalaq (ᐆᓇᓛᖅ (uunalaaq)) – [“west wind”],

    {uanniluak – “southwesterly wind”},  {unanngâk – “east wind”}

  • Varrick (ᕚᕐᕆᒃ (vaarrik)) _ OR_ (ᕓᕐᕆᒃ (verrik/vairrik))

Ahtna Athabaskan names:

  • Yakone (ᔭᑰᓐ (yakon/jakuun)) – [ “red aurora”], [“blood spray on the snow”]

Plains North America

Pawnee names:

  • Kuruk (ᑯᕈᒃ (kuruk)) – “bear”, see also possible Inuit-Yupik etymology

Siouan names:

  • Hakoda (ᐊᑰᑕ (hakoda/hakuuta)) – {koda – “friend”}
  • Hotah (ᐆᑖ (hotaa/huutaa)) – “white”

Other

Other names:

  • Bato (ᐹᑑ (baato/paatuu))
  • Hama (ᐋᒪ (haama))
  • Kanna (ᑳᓐᓇ (kaanna))
  • Katara (ᑲᑖᕋ (kataara))
  • Korra (ᑰᕐᕋ (korra/kuurra))
  • Yugoda (ᔪᒎᑕ (yugoda/juguuta))

fluorescentnova:

jopper-chopper:

Show this photo to your daughters as they grow up.

Show them that courage is important, even in the scariest of situations. This woman stood up and faced her fears, spoke her truth in front of a group of men while balancing the world on her shoulders. She is a hero. She is a representation for all women who are done being assaulted and abused.

I Believe Dr. Christine Blasey Ford

Show it to them because our mothers didn’t show us this one:

Who is she? Anita Hill. 

What’s she doing here? Testifying about the sexual misconduct of then supreme court nominee Clarence Thomas aka now the most senior justice on the Supreme Court.

Please Learn About Her

philhollywood:

bemusedlybespectacled:

vague-humanoid:

trcunning:

tweet from Wikipedia brown (verified, @eveewing): 

I just thought about this today and dug through my pictures to find it: a letter from a black soldier in the Civil War to the person who owns his daughter. “The longer you keep my child from me the longer you will have to burn in Hell and the quicker you will get there.“ 

photo text (with corrected spelling and broken into sentences, paragraphs): 

Letter from a Black Soldier to the Owner of His Daughter

Spotswood Ric, a former slave, writes to Kittey Diggs, 1864: 

I received a letter from Cariline telling me that you say I tried to steal, to plunder, my child away from you. Not I want you to understand that Mary is my Child and she is a God given rite of my own. 

And you may hold on to her as long as you can. But I want you to remember this one thing, that the longer you keep my Child from me the longer you will have to burn in hell and the quicker you’ll get there

For we are now making up about one thousand black troops to come up thorough, and want to come through, Glasgow. And when we come woe be to Copperhood rebels and to the Slaveholding rebels. For we don’t expect to leave them there. Root nor branch. But we think however that we (that have children in the hands of you devils), we will try your the day that we enter Glasgow. 

I want you to understand Kittey Diggs that where ever you and I meet we are enemies to each other. I offered once to pay you forty dollars for my own Child but I am glad now that you did not accept it. Just hold on now as long as you can and the worse it will be for you. 

You never in you life before I came down hear did you give children anything, not anything whatever, not even a dollars worth of expenses. Now you call my children your property. Not so with me. 

My children is my own and I expect to get them. And when I get ready to come after Mary I will have both a power and authority to bring her away and to exact vengeances on them that holds my Child. 

You will then know how to talk to me. I will assure that. And you will know how to talk right too. I want you now to just hold on; to hear if you want to. If your conscience tells that’s the road, go that road and what it will bring you to Kittey Diggs. 

I have no fears about getting Mary out of your hands. This whole Government gives cheer to me and you cannot help yourself.

Source: Ira Berlin, ed. Freedom, A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861-1867. Cambridge: Cambridge University, 1982, 690.

@meanmisscharles @rootbeergoddess @zamzamafterzina

I wanted to find out what happened (DID HE GET HIS DAUGHTER BACK?) and the answer is that not only was he reunited with his family, but went on to be a successful minister and his daughter was interviewed in the 30s for the Slave Narratives Project.