I searched the title on Yahoo, which linked me to Wikipedia. I use Google for lots of things, but not searching. I find it one of the less useful search engines. Too much chaff around the grain. Or it could just be that I think more like the Yahoo programmers than the Google programmers.
PS.: "Google" is not a verb in my world. Thank you for not using it as one. ;-)
> PS.: "Google" is not a verb in my world. Thank you for not using it as one. ;-)
LOL! Well I'll try to refrain from using it in your presence, but I think it's too late to stop the Genericization of verb "Google" into the culture at large. It's going the way of Kleenex, Zipper, and Magic Marker.
I figured invoking his name would get your attention, Roger. ;-)
Although I am not a Jew, I have long suspected that my patrilineal lineage extends straight back through Israel, because I carry his name as my surname.
I think it's time to consider participating in the National Geographic Genographic Project to get proof. I'm gonna own it, if it's true. (Plus it has the added benefit that would also really annoy my biological father, who became quite agitated at me some years back when I first posited that we German Catholics were Crypto-Judaic.)
> Strange, IE makes the last vowel point a separate letter (which it isn't).
Well, it is going from Mac to PC, which might be part of the problem. How does it look in the article title, or here? יַעֲקֹב
Plus, I just cut and pasted the Hebrew from Wikipedia, so who knows what inaccuracies were introduced from there?
Well, it is going from Mac to PC, which might be part of the problem
Doubtful; I just think it's Internet Explorer being stupid, as it looks fine on Firefox.
You may very well have Jewish lineage; I can tell you that the surname is very likely Sephardic in nature, implying roots from Spain, northern Africa, or the Middle East, where last names involving Biblical characters is fairly common. My grandfather had his roots in Iran (then Persia), and carried with him the last name Eliyahu (shortened to Elia once his family came from Russia).
I suspect the Middle East, because of proximity, but I could always be surprised.
My father's people fled Hesse and Bavaria in the 1770s to avoid conscription, and settled on the Volga for 100 years. My mother is a Marian (literally, her grandmother's name was Mary Mary) through France from antiquity (Da Vinci Code, anyone?).
I get the sense that my people have always been on the run.
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Sadly, my last name is of Saxon origin, so no fancy graphics for me.
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How does that look?
> Sadly, my last name is of Saxon origin, so no fancy graphics for me.
Very good, Kevin! How did you figure it out? Google?
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No different. It may be an HTML thing.
How did you figure it out? Google?
I searched the title on Yahoo, which linked me to Wikipedia. I use Google for lots of things, but not searching. I find it one of the less useful search engines. Too much chaff around the grain. Or it could just be that I think more like the Yahoo programmers than the Google programmers.
PS.: "Google" is not a verb in my world. Thank you for not using it as one. ;-)
From:
no subject
May be an IE thing (see below).
> PS.: "Google" is not a verb in my world. Thank you for not using it as one. ;-)
LOL! Well I'll try to refrain from using it in your presence, but I think it's too late to stop the Genericization of verb "Google" into the culture at large. It's going the way of Kleenex, Zipper, and Magic Marker.
From:
no subject
Strange, IE makes the last vowel point a separate letter (which it isn't).
From:
no subject
I figured invoking his name would get your attention, Roger. ;-)
Although I am not a Jew, I have long suspected that my patrilineal lineage extends straight back through Israel, because I carry his name as my surname.
I think it's time to consider participating in the National Geographic Genographic Project to get proof. I'm gonna own it, if it's true. (Plus it has the added benefit that would also really annoy my biological father, who became quite agitated at me some years back when I first posited that we German Catholics were Crypto-Judaic.)
> Strange, IE makes the last vowel point a separate letter (which it isn't).
Well, it is going from Mac to PC, which might be part of the problem. How does it look in the article title, or here? יַעֲקֹב
Plus, I just cut and pasted the Hebrew from Wikipedia, so who knows what inaccuracies were introduced from there?
From:
no subject
Doubtful; I just think it's Internet Explorer being stupid, as it looks fine on Firefox.
You may very well have Jewish lineage; I can tell you that the surname is very likely Sephardic in nature, implying roots from Spain, northern Africa, or the Middle East, where last names involving Biblical characters is fairly common. My grandfather had his roots in Iran (then Persia), and carried with him the last name Eliyahu (shortened to Elia once his family came from Russia).
From:
no subject
My father's people fled Hesse and Bavaria in the 1770s to avoid conscription, and settled on the Volga for 100 years. My mother is a Marian (literally, her grandmother's name was Mary Mary) through France from antiquity (Da Vinci Code, anyone?).
I get the sense that my people have always been on the run.