Anonymous ID: 4d964e March 10, 2018, 1:49 p.m. No.616821   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Patronymic Surnames: Many Germans have patronymic names–surnames derived by combining the father’s given name with some form of Sohn (the German word for “son”). Examples are Hansen and Jacobsohn. Some areas of Germany used changing patronymic surnames into the nineteenth century. This means the surname could change with each generation as the children of the new generation took the name of their father as their surnames. For example, Jacob’s son, Robert, has the surname Jacobsohn and Robert’s son, Johannes, has the surname Robertsohn, even though Robert’s surname is Jacobsohn. The areas that used changing patronymic surnames were Ostfriesland and Schleswig-Holstein, which is not surprising because these are the areas of Germany closest to Scandinavia, where patronymics also survived into the 1800s.

Anonymous ID: 4d964e March 10, 2018, 2:12 p.m. No.617210   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>617110

Ive always wondered too. DWS for one, has to have money and is completely unfuckable. They all have those dyke cuts and no fashion sense at all….their pantsuits dont even match