The Ware were a Bantu ethnic/ linguistic group in Tanzania. They are believed to have become extinct. Around 1900, they were still living on an island in the Eastern part of Lake Victoria off the coast of Mara Region. According to Maho & Sands (2002), their language has died out as mentioned by Sommer (1992: 397). It is not known whether there are still people calling themselves "Ware" today in that area, nor which language they would be speaking.
George is a widespread given name, derived from Greek Γεώργιος (Geōrgios)) through the Latin Georgius. While it is commonly a masculine name, in English it is also sometimes given as a feminine name. Its popularity is due to the widespread veneration of the Christian military saint Saint George (George of Lydda c. 275/281–303).
The name derives in origin from the name of Zeus Georgos, worshipped as a god of crops.
The noun γεωργός geōrgos "husbandman, farmer" and the verb γεωργέω geōrgeō "to be a farmer; to plow, till, cultivate" is found in the classical language (Plato, Aristophanes). The word geōrgos "husbandman, farmer" was one of Zeus's epithets in Athens: Ζεύς Γεωργός (Zeus Geōrgos), the god of crops and harvest.Aelius Herodianus in the 2nd century lists Georgios alongside Demetrios and Ammonios as a theophoric name derived from the theonym by suffixing -ios. It is likely that the historical Saint George (Georgios) was born in Lydda, Palestine in c. 280 as the son of a Greek Christian nobleman from Cappadocia. After his martyrdom in 303, the name Georgios soon became used more widely among Christians in the Eastern Empire.
George, Giorgi, (Georgian: გიორგი) (1250–1268) was the eldest son of David VII Ulu, a Bagratid king of Georgia, by whom he was designated as heir-apparent to the throne. In the early 1260s, he was held as a hostage at the Mongol Ilkhan court of Hulagu Khan and later served with his father in the Mongol military ranks. He died at the age of 18 in 1268, preceding his father by two years.
George was born in 1250 to King David VII and the Alan woman Altun, whom the king took as a temporary wife because he had no children by his queen Jigda-Khatun and whom he agreed to dismiss after the birth of an heir. The marriage was, in fact, repudiated after the birth of the second child, a daughter, Tamar. George was adopted by Jigda-Khatun, who died shortly afterwards. George, along with his father, step-mother, and the uncle David VI Narin, is mentioned in a church inscription from Abelia in the south of Georgia.
George is a surname of Irish, English, Welsh, Middle Eastern Christian (usually Lebanese), or French origin. Notable people with the surname include:
Si yo te sigo amando como te amo
Voy a acabar usando una camisa de fuerza
Voy a dejar sin rosas el planeta
Si yo te sigo amando de la forma en que te amo, amor.
Ay ay, na na na na, no no no...
Si yo te sigo amando como te amo,
Voy a acabar cruzando cuatro mares y una luna,
Ay, es que tu eres mi fortuna,
Tu eres mi vida, Tu eres mi quebranto.
Si yo te sigo amando de esta forma asi tan loca
¡Voy a ser un esclavo del rojo de tu boca!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
No me hagas sufrir ay Carmelina de mi vida, ¡Ay Dios!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
Ya no me hagas sufrir, ¡No! ¡Ya no! Ya no me hagas llorar.
Ay Carmelina, Ay Carmelina de mi vida...
Si yo te sigo amando como te amo
Voy a acabar cruzando cuatro mares y una luna,
Ay, es que tu eres mi fortuna, ay ay ay ay,
Tu eres mi vida, Tu eres mi quebranto.
Si yo te sigo amando de esta forma asi tan loca,
¡Voy a ser un esclavo del rojo de tu boca!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
No me hagas sufrir ay Carmelina de mi vida, ¡Ay Dios!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
Ya no me hagas sufrir, ¡No! ¡Ya no! Ya no me hagas llorar.
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
No me hagas sufrir ay Carmelina de mi vida, ¡Ay Dios!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
Ya no me hagas sufrir más ¡Ya no! ¡Ay Carmelina! yea yea yea yea.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Nah Nah Nah, Oe Oe ¡Oh Ay Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Carmelina, Carmelina!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carme-Carme-Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carme-Carme-Carmelina! Ay yea mama Nah
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe