This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Opinions] Re: Jevgenijs
I'd say the Lithuanian or Latvian form. Those two seem to have a lot of masculine names that end in -s. It could easily be via Russian Jevegij.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Sorry, this should have gone under Llewella's.The Russian form is Yevgeniy (Евгений), not Jevegij.

This message was edited 2/15/2012, 7:35 AM

vote up1
YeahBut I don't know anything about Russian so I didn't know if it had an alternate form not in the database. I didn't think it really was Russian anyway, but a related language. Seems like other people think it's Lithuanian.
vote up1
Russian names are pretty straightforward. Not a lot of variation, not a lot of creative takeoffs on names. They tend to be pretty consistent, although of course there are more and less popular names that vary between generations. Generally you'll just find the one form of a name.
vote up1
Yes, but when you transliterate, you can use a few different spellings. It could be Evgeni, Evgenij, Yevgeni, Yevgenij, Jevgeni, or Jevgenij.
vote up1
It is very Lithuanian... all male names end in s in that language.
vote up1