Previous Talk moved to talk:Asa Winstanley.
You have a small problem coming your way, Asa, and the problem is your name. You are probably aware of the pre-Christian derivation of it; I have an article coming up for the
Norse Mythology block concerning the
Asa: I fear it directs to your namespace. I'll note this with Larry.
sjc
OK, what do you and Larry sugest I do? I don't mind changing my user name to Asa Winstaley (full name) and removing my stuff from
Asa, moving to
Asa Winstanley. I would prefer this to
Wikipedians/Asa[?]. Also, i would like to keep a link to
Asa Winstanley on
Asa so that all the links to my name in histories and Recent Changes are not totally broken. Hows that? Will wait for you and/or Larry to reply b4 acting on this. cheers.
(p.s. My name is pre-Christian - Hebrew! Asa was also a king in the OT, so maybe i should have thought of that to before i claimed thee space for myself! ah well live and learn) --Asa
Yeah, I spotted that as well. But then my viewpoint is post-Christian... :-) sjc
after futher investigation: seems it was
The Cunctator who put my name as a sub page of
Wikipedians, thou i assumed for some reason it was you. Also seems he is the only one (that i can find) that uses this particular scheme. is this an upcoming standard or something? I tend not to keep up with
Wikipedia policy... I would
prefer Asa Winstanley.
One more thing: Asa is not just my Wiki name its my real name :) -- Asa
- No, it's not an upcoming standard. Asa Winstanley is all yours. :) --Stephen Gilbert
The following has been moved here from Talk:Ase (Ase redirects to Asa):
Removed:
Ase , plural Asen, horses have been ancient pre-christian German revered beings (gods, spirits or deities). The Angle Saxon form is assa, assen, M.E. asse, Celtic assan, Latin asinus meaning donkey (small horse).
Assaran is an Old Prussian language word meaning watering hole for horses, or lake. It is derived fromm assa and water spirit Ran.
The nordic version of the German Ase is Aesir.
---
Aesir is the name of the family of gods headed by Odin. What exactly do they have to do with horses? [[1] (http://www.geocities.com/cas111jd/norse/norse_arv_austri.htm)] gives ase as an Old German form of "god" from Proto-IndoEuropean "aes" meaning light. Rmhermen 13:06 Aug 22, 2002 (PDT)
Should we really have links to Wikipedians at the bottom of articles? cferrero 18:57 Mar 3, 2003 (UTC)
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