Schmid Schmitt Schmidt Schmied, Mayer Meier Meyer, Müller, Schneider, Fischer, Becker, Bauer, Falk, Wagner ...
ohk-TOH-behr (אוקטובר) (Hebrew actually uses the German names for all of the Western months)
Hans Bahlow has written: 'Niederdeutsche Namenwelt' -- subject(s): Etymology, Low German Names, Low German language, Names, Names, Low German 'Wedelstaedt Deutsches Namenlexikon' -- subject(s): Etymology, German, German language, Names, Names, Personal, Personal Names 'Niederdeutsches Namenbuch' -- subject(s): Low German, Names, Personal, Personal Names 'Deutsches namenbuch' -- subject(s): Etymology, German, German language, Names, Names, Personal, Personal Names
Western German football championship was created in 1903.
Western German football championship ended in 1933.
well none have German names
There are no countries in the Western Hemisphere where German is spoken as an official language.
Wilhelm Reinhold Brauer has written: 'Prussische Siedlungen westlich der Weichsel' -- subject(s): Dialects, Etymology, Geographical Names, German Names, German language, Names, Names, Geographical, Names, German
The names commonly associated with the 12 disciples in Western culture are translations or adaptations of their original Hebrew or Aramaic names. As Christianity spread throughout the Western world, these names were anglicized for ease of pronunciation and understanding by Western audiences.
There are really no German relegions.
As a rule names are not translated, so it remains Jennifer. There is no German equivalent.
It could be both - Jewish names and German names are often similar and it could be that your ancestors were both Jewish and German (Jews living in Germany).
The German Goths