latin names.

Carole Brunneus” works for “Charlie Brown” as “Carole” is a Latin diminutive form of the name Charlie, and “Brunneus” would be the “Brown” surname since that surname etymologically arose as a description of the person, whether they had brown hair, or brown eyes, etc.

George” which etymologically meant “farmer” in Greek, a combination of the Greek words for “soil” and “work”. “Agricola” is the Latin word for farmer,

Jack can be Latinized as “Iacobus,” the name for James, or in this case “Iacculus,” a diminutive, more affectionate form

Mauritius being a period-appropriate Latinization of “Morris,” and “Dominus” is a respectful title for a man, such as “Mister” in this case. Now for the surname “Lessmore”. In Latin, “Minus” is often the word for “Less” is many contexts, and “Plus” is often likewise often the Latin equivalent of “More” so we’ll turn the name “Lessmore” into “Minusplus”.

The etymology of the name “Rudolph” is from the Old High German “Hrodulf”, meaning “fame-wolf,” “glory-wolf”. “Lupus” (masculine) is the universal, classical Latin for “wolf” and “Gloriae” means “fame, renown, glorious reputation.” So, the name Rudolph, meaning glory-wolf becomes “Lupusgloriae” in Latin. “Tarandus” is “reindeer” in classical Latin, and “Naso Rubro” is the most naturally expressed Latin translation of “red-nosed” using the ablative of description: “with a red nose”.

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