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If you look up example names for humans in the D&D 5th edition Player's Handbook, you see a large list of human cultures and multiple names under each category. This web page might have an identical list: https://www.dndbeyond.com/races/1-human. When I look at the list, I definitely see some names that really exist in real world languages, and some that are only moderately distorted from them. Others may not match real names, but are meant to remind you of real languages in letter choice and syllable structure.

For each of the cultures listed, what real-world languages inspired their name lists?

I don't think the naming culture necessarily connects to the people's appearances or other aspects of their culture.

TreeSpawned posted this comment that's helpful to people who may view this message:

Not an answer, but some further info: Did you know there are lists of names for human characters based on real world cultures at the end of in Xanathar's Guide?

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    \$\begingroup\$ Not an answer, but some further info: Did you know there are lists of names for human characters based on real world cultures at the end of in Xanathar's Guide? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jul 7 at 7:04
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    \$\begingroup\$ Thanks, @TreeSpawned, that's very useful to me. It's also useful to many of the people who will look at this. \$\endgroup\$
    – Jetpack
    Commented Jul 7 at 14:26
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    \$\begingroup\$ @TreeSpawned My understanding that those names aren't "based on" real-world cultures, they are names used by real-world cultures. \$\endgroup\$
    – jwodder
    Commented Jul 7 at 16:58
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    \$\begingroup\$ @ThomasMarkov I am pretty sure the Forgotten Realms tag should stay here, as those names in the PHB are from cultures specifically found in that world. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jul 8 at 9:00

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I don't think there is any kind of 1-to-1 match

There is no evidence that every Faerûnian language is inspired by a particular real-world language of a particular era.

We can assume some names/words are inspired by particular cultures because of how they sound. But this assumption would be based primarily on the US popular culture, not other cultures. It's like "world music", which can sound "persian" or "arabic" for a western listener, but not for real iranians or arabs. You need to be a linguist in order to construct a fantasy language which is based on a real language.

However, some Faerûnian language groups were indeed inspired by real-world language families, as their authors claim. We can read this in Dragon Annual 4 which was published by TSR in 1999.

Its "Speaking in Tongues" article said that

  • Raumtheran languages (Rashemi, Halardrim, Allesian) was inspired by Slavic
  • Imaskari languages (Imaskari, Durpari, Gurri) was inspired by Altaic
  • Kara-Turan languages (Amaese, Han, Shou Chiang) was inspired by Asian languages
  • Rauric languages (Mulani and Untheric languages) was inspired by Afroasiatic
  • and so on, there were more than 60 languages mentioned in the article

Unfortunately, 5e language set is pretty different from its 1999 counterpart, although there are some intersections.

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    \$\begingroup\$ Thanks for finding a Word of God Answer. What's a good way to get my hands on Dragon Annual? Is that something a good librarian in the US would be able to find? Would I have better luck going though a used comics and games store? \$\endgroup\$
    – Jetpack
    Commented Jul 7 at 14:49
  • \$\begingroup\$ This answer helps helps me settle my doubts about Rashemi and Mulan. Did it say more about about what Afroasiatic languages fed into the Rauric languages in general, and Mulan specifically? \$\endgroup\$
    – Jetpack
    Commented Jul 7 at 14:56
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    \$\begingroup\$ @Jetpack I have no idea where to get Dragon Annual, unfortunately. I've read about it on the infamous wiki. I personally have no access to the article. \$\endgroup\$
    – enkryptor
    Commented Jul 8 at 7:51
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I'm the one who asked the question. I can kick it off with a partial answer based on what I can tell

Calishite

Arabic, but I'd want someone else to look into this one.

A few of the men's names are only one letter off from real Arabic names: Mehmed, and Suleiman. Khalid is an Arabic given name and surname.

I don't recognize many of the names on the list. I know in the real world, there are many varied cultures that use some Arabic given names, so if this list is is more mixed with Turkish or Persian, or some other language, I'd like to know.

Chondathan

Germanic.

This is the default set of names in the region of most adventures. I think the idea is that these are meant to sound medieval to English speakers.

I would like someone else to weigh in on whether these are meant to sound more Norse, or if the other names in the list seem to come from other cultures.

Randal, Helm, Grim, Darvin, Kerri, and Rowan are real names in English and other Germanic languages. The surnames are all English word pairs that sound a little more fantastical than real word-pair surnames. I think this is intended to remind people of Medieval England in a standard fantasy setting.

The "JH" letter pair is puzzling. I think one of the 4th edition names examples was Jhonn, so maybe in D&D, the Fantasy English language uses "jh".

Damaran

Slavic, but I'd want another opinion.

I think Orel, Grigor, Pavel, Olma, and Kara are all real Slavic names. Other names are similar to Fyodor, Katerina, Natalia, and maybe Igor and Josef. The surnames often have the -ov ending in Slavic names. The -sk ending occurs in some place names in Russia.

Illuskan

I can't tell. I suppose it's nonspecifically Northern European.

Olga is a Slavic name. The name "Mara" is a cognate of "Mary" and occurs in many languages. Having many words ending in "th" might be to remind us of Old Norse. ("Th" is a rare sound in the world, but it occurs in English, Old Norse, and some forms of Greek and Hebrew.) "Ander" looks clearly related to "Andrew", especially the Scandinavian form of "Anders". If anything, "Ander" sounds more English than "Andrew" does. The surnames are dramatic pairs of English words.

Mulan

I can't tell.

My number one guess is ancient Egyptian. Ancient Egyptian names often are written with hyphens and I think they often end in "et". The "th" sound does occur. I can also see this being based on Babylonian languages, a mixture of ancient languages, or something completely different.

Rashemi

Slavic, but I'd want another opinion.

"Vladislak" looks like "Vladislav". Slavic women's surnames end in "a". If the "y" in "Dyernina" is a consonant sound, that may be imitating Slavic languages.

I think it's surprising to have two Slavic-inspired name lists that are very different from each other. That makes me suspect that I made an error somewhere.

Shou

Mandarin Chinese

Chinese words are often syllable, even if Chinese given names are usually two syllables. The spellings of Chao, Jia, Qiao, and Shui are specifically based on the Pinyin spelling system. Some of these are well-known Mandarin names (Chen, Bai, Long, Mei, Jun). A few of these are not valid Mandarin syllables, but they are close enough for a fantasy analog language or for other Chinese dialects.

Turami

Many Romance examples, at least one Germanic example.

Many of these names are real names in Spanish, Portuguese, or Italian. Others are different by swapping a letter (Diero/Diego, Rimardo/Ricardo) or adding an N. "Salazar" is a name of Basque origin, but it's been borrowed into Portuguese or Spanish. (enkriptor pointed out that if the "y" is a consonant sound, this name doesn't sound as Slavic).

This isn't the whole story. Vonda is a Germanic name.

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    \$\begingroup\$ You say that «the "dy" is distinctly Slavic», but I see no names with "dy" in the Basic Rules (except from Dyernina, but it's more like "dye-" not "dy-"). Where did "dy" come from? \$\endgroup\$
    – enkryptor
    Commented Jul 6 at 17:22
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    \$\begingroup\$ As a Slav I can say I wouldn't be specially surprised if someone would use a name from Illuskan or Rashemi list in real life. I might think it's a nickname, or a name adopted by someone of the old faith (rodzimowierstwo). But it would not sound out of place. We have a strong cross contamination of languages with Norse people, FWIW. \$\endgroup\$
    – Mołot
    Commented Jul 6 at 21:59
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    \$\begingroup\$ @Jetpack Hi - just to add to this. I suspect this answer will evolve as you get feedback from others on this. I can confirm for sure that Turami (mostly) has some influence from Romance languages. Some, like Marta and Luisa are exact copies of examples in real life. As to the "n", yes. But, I think it's more accurate to say that one letter/sound has been replaced, e.g. Diero (Diego), Rimardo (Ricardo). Yet, some of the female names do not follow the pattern, e.g. Vonda. That name has a Germanic origin. I think you need to be clear and say "some" names have a romance influence. \$\endgroup\$
    – Senmurv
    Commented Jul 7 at 7:33
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    \$\begingroup\$ @Jetpack Comments are there to improve answers; if people didn’t want them incorporated into your answer, they shouldn’t have offered them as a comment. If you wish, you may note their contributions in a footnote or similar, but it isn't necessary. Community Wiki doesn’t really serve much purpose and I don’t really recommend it. It was an experiment that didn’t really pan out. Even with the contributions in comments, this is still predominantly your work and you deserve the reputation for it. \$\endgroup\$
    – KRyan
    Commented Jul 7 at 16:01
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    \$\begingroup\$ "The surnames often have the -ov ending in Slavic names. " -ov ending is considered russian ending, so it's not Slavic. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jul 8 at 14:57
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Calishite: These names are inspired by Arabic names. For example, male names like "Aseir" and "Haseid" and female names like "Atala" and "Jasmal" have Arabic roots or phonetic similarities.

Chondathan: The names here draw from Old English and Anglo-Saxon influences. Names like "Darvin" and "Evendur" for males, and "Arveene" and "Jhessail" for females echo this heritage.

Damaran: These names are influenced by Slavic languages. Male names like "Bor" and "Grigor," and female names like "Alethra" and "Katernin" reflect Slavic naming conventions.

Illuskan: The names for this ethnic group are inspired by Scandinavian and Norse cultures. Male names like "Ander" and "Bran," and female names like "Amafrey" and "Kethra" are reminiscent of Norse naming traditions.

Mulan: The names are influenced by Ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian cultures. Male names like "Aoth" and "Ramas," and female names like "Arizima" and "Nephis" have a distinct ancient Near Eastern flavor.

Rashemi: These names are inspired by Russian and other Eastern European languages. Male names like "Borivik" and "Vladislak," and female names like "Fyevarra" and "Navarra" reflect this Slavic influence.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Thanks, Groovy. This could use more elaboration. For every language family, you give four examples of names that that show a connection to a real world language, but you don't say what they have in common with that language. If you used an LLM to help you with this, could you delete the examples and claims that you don't have a source for? \$\endgroup\$
    – Jetpack
    Commented Jul 7 at 4:10
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    \$\begingroup\$ @Groovy. Thanks for you answer so far. :) You missed Shou and Turami. What are you thoughts on these? \$\endgroup\$
    – Senmurv
    Commented Jul 7 at 7:35

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