Haimo

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See also: haimo

Old High German

Alternative forms

Etymology

From haim (home) (old form of heim) +‎ -o (suffix forming given names). First attested in the 8th C. CE. The orthographic variant Heimo appears regularly from around 800 CE. Cognate with Old English Hāma.

Proper noun

Haimo m

  1. (Bavarian) a male given name

Declension

Declension of Haimo (masculine n-stem)
case singular plural
nominative Haimo Haimon, Haimun
accusative Haimon, Haimun Haimon, Haimun
genitive Haimen, Haimin Haimōno
dative Haimen, Haimin Haimōm, Haimōn

Descendants

  • Middle High German: Heimo (11th-13th C.), Haimo (11th-15th C.), Heymo (15th C.), Haymo (14th C.)

References

  • Sigmund Herzberg-Fränkel, editor (1904), “I: Dioecesis Salisburgensis: Regiones Salisburgensis et Bavarica”, in Necrologia Germaniae (Monumenta Germaniae Historica) (in Latin), Tomvs II Dioecesis Salisbvrgensis, Berolini: Apvd Weidmannos, →ISBN, →OCLC, Liber confraternitatum vetustior (784-11th C.), Monumenta Necrologica Monasterii S. Petri Salisburgensis, page 8, column 9, line 2
  • Zusammengesetzte Handschrift: Liber Confraternitatum Sancti Petri (Liber Vitae, Verbrüderungsbuch von St. Peter). Traditionen von St. Peter (Traditionscodex M) (in Latin), Salzburg, Erzabtei St. Peter, Benediktinerstift, Archiv, Hs. A 1, 784-13th C., page 6