- Wed May 10, 2017 6:37 pm
#34719
Hi NeverMissing,
If a name references an event in a person's life I would expect that we can glean something about the event from that name. The name "little rabbit," used as an example in this paragraph, does not tell you anything about an event in the child's life. Rather, according to the paragraph, it signifies the child's size and a representational animal.
Consider the following. In Western, Catholic tradition, young teens are given a confirmation name. This name is typically the name of a particular saint that has meaning for the individual. This name is given at a particular point in a person's life, during a religious ritual, but does it reference an event in the person's life? If you knew that someone's confirmation name was Paul, would the name "Paul" tell you anything about that event? It would tell you that the person was confirmed, but this does not reference the event.
In other words, having been given a name during a certain ritual or at a certain age, does not necessarily refer to events. The third paragraph does provide a lot of details for names referencing events, but paragraph two focuses on other aspects of Hopi names: specifically, that they carry semantic (meaningful) content of physical appearance or clan affiliation.
The first sentence of the Third paragraph seems to bolster the idea that the second paragraph does not discuss event-referencing meaning. The opening words of this paragraph - "More often though" - indicates that what follows is contrary to what was just discussed.