Skip to content

Curiosities of Puritan nomenclature (1888)

Curiosities of Puritan nomenclature (1888) published on No Comments on Curiosities of Puritan nomenclature (1888)

If I have not said this before, I love the internet archive.  I imagine that the sentiment is shared by anyone trying to dig up old information.  I have been saved by books digitized by the internet archive in my work, and in my private genealogy research.

I also love the Public Domain Review.  It is almost like a best of the internet archive, in that it pulls out items of interest like the Curiosities of Puritan nomenclature (1888).  Of course, the Public Domain Review also highlights items of curiosity in other places all over the net.  It is a great place to find archival collections of all sorts that are normally not easy to pull out of a [insert name of search engine here] search.

Now if you, like me, have spent some real time with genealogical research then you have spent time with the nitty gritty of history.  You have read over land grants, court transcripts, and small claims; you have dissected the language of historical sketches and town diaries written hundreds of years ago; you have wondered why 15 men within two generations of the same family are named Vine.  So books like the Curiosities of Puritan nomenclature (1888) are interesting because they explain why surnames came about at all, where they came from, why there are so many Rogers and Johns, and much more.

Morse Code| The Art of Manliness

Morse Code| The Art of Manliness published on No Comments on Morse Code| The Art of Manliness

Alright, so, in light of Google Reader taking a big dive soon, I have shopped around alternative RSS feed aggregators.  I have downloaded my OPML file.  And now, I am going through my starred items.  I don’t know about you but I’ve used Google Reader’s star function as a kind of memory box.  I don’t want all those goodies to just disappear, so some of them are going to end up right here.  For example:   Morse Code: How to Translate and Use it | The Art of Manliness.  I’ve always wanted to learn Morse code as much as I mourn how I’ve forgotten the sign language alphabet my friends and I used to message each other with during junior high science class.  I may learn it one day and when that day comes, the Morse code article on The Art of Manliness will be invaluable.

More content from the GReader starred list will be coming your way.  Are you ready?

What could be better than Esperanto and Klingon?

What could be better than Esperanto and Klingon? published on No Comments on What could be better than Esperanto and Klingon?

Volapük!  That’s what!  I never knew this, probably because I never pursued this, but invented languages have been happening throughout time.  I love the article:  Trüth, Beaüty, and Volapük at The Public Domain Review.  Who knew a language could be undone by umlaut?!

Primary Sidebar