. Kiedyś sofeicz pytał o nazwę Niemiec w różnych językach. Okazuje się że sprawa jest (chyba) bardziej skomplikowana niż on przedstawił
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_Germany
![[Obrazek: 733px-Germany_Name_European_Languages.svg.png]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/44/Germany_Name_European_Languages.svg/733px-Germany_Name_European_Languages.svg.png)
Przypominam ze nadal jest nierozwiązana moja zagadka o Śląsku...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_Germany
Cytat: Other forms
Medieval Hebrew language :
Ashkenaz – from biblical Ashkenaz was the son of Japheth and grandson of Noah . Ashkenaz is thought to be the ancestor of the Germans.
Medieval Latin: Teutonia , regnum Teutonicum – after the Teutons .
Medieval Greek: Frángoi, frangikós (for "Germans", "German") – after the
Franks .
Tahitian language : Purutia (also
Heremani ) – a corruption of Prusse, the French name for the German Kingdom of Prussia.
Lower Sorbian language: bawory or
bawery (in older or dialectal use) – from the name of the Bavarian tribe.
Old Norse : Suðrvegr – literally "south way" (cf. Norway )[2]
Kinyarwanda : Ubudage , Kirundi :
Ubudagi – thought to derive from the greeting guten Tag used by Germans during the colonial times, [3] or from
deutsch . [4]
Navajo : Béésh Bich’ahii Bikéyah ("Metal Cap-wearer Land"), in reference to Stahlhelm-wearing German soldiers.
Lakota : Iyášiča Makȟóčhe [5] ("Bad Speaker Land"), perhaps in reference to German settlers who didn't speak English fluently.
Sudovian : miksiskai , Old Prussian
miksiskāi (both for "German") – from
miksît "to stammer".
Przypominam ze nadal jest nierozwiązana moja zagadka o Śląsku...

