Similarly, Martin often uses occupational or place names as surnames, a common practice in early England. Daenerys, Beony, Denys, Frynne, Mhaegan, Edwyn, Elys, Dykk, Lenyl.ĩ. Martin often uses Welsh-like spellings–specifically using the letter Y in place of an I or E. As mentioned above, real naming conventions are used to create new names. I’ve never known a Polliver, personally, but I hear it once, and it does sound like a name to me.ĭaenerys Targaryen played by Emilia ClarkeĨ. He does that by using a simple actual English word name like Oliver and changing it just a bit to make a character named Polliver. And although they are purely imagined by the author, they still seem like acceptable personally identifiable names. But a great majority of the ASOIF character names are created by Martin himself. Many are just simply plucked from current name charts (Kyle, Jon, Lucas, Jenny, Kyra). Some of his names are based on Medieval and old Celtic names, which normally conjure up a fantastical world. ![]() ![]() Well, maybe with the exception of Daenerys. ![]() Martin’s characters reflect our continuing advice about creating fantasy names: make them easy to pronounce and easy to spell. There are currently 2,054 named characters in the A Song of Ice and Fire, series - the books on which the HBO television series Game of Thrones is based. Martin has succeeded in creating some of the best fantasy names in literature.
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