I just read the 4th volume of Harry Potter, and I'm wondering about the name of the Quidditch champion. Does "Krum" mean something in Bulgarian, like "Fleur Delacour" means something in French?
Because FLEUR DELACOUR means FLOWER OF THE YARD so simply in
French. There was two translations (one and a half) and one in BULGARIAN and another in FRENCH not for Captncavern.
À vouloir fuir la pluie, on tombe bien souvent dans la rivière.
Viktor Krum looks weird, in bulgarian it should be Viktor Krumov.... OK, she is english after all.
Why you are interested in that particular name? And why you thought it might mean "FLOWER OF THE YARD"? Just cuirous.
This Viktor Krum is one of the main characters in the book, and one of those I couldn't understand the meaning of the name. That was also just curiosity
Last week I read a book in which there was a whole chapter about the stories behind the names of characters and places in the Harry Potter books. Fleur Delacour was mentioned, but Viktor Krum wasn't. Maybe his name doen't mean anything then...
Do you know that J.K. Rowling has also written two small books? "Quidditch through the ages " ("Le Quidditch à travers les âges") and "Fantastic beasts and where to find them" ("Les animaux fantastiques") (foreword by Albus Dumbledore )
fan4battle wrote:It is said that Krum meant wolf in ancient (non-slavonic) Bulgarian.
It reminds me of something... In French, for instance, the characters are named "Professor Lupin" and "Sirius Black". I noticed that Lupin was an old word for "were-wolf"... Those who read the books will understand the interest of what I'm saying... As for "Sirius", it's the main star of the constellation of the "Grand Chien" (Big Dog )... and those who read the books... Idem