Solution Manual for Comprehensive Health Insurance:
Billing, Coding, and Reimbursement, 3rd Edition, Deborah Vines, Ann Braceland, Elizabeth Rollins, Susan Miller
Full version at: https://testbankbell.com/product/solution-manual-forcomprehensive-health-insurance-billing-coding-and-reimbursement-3rdedition-deborah-vines-ann-braceland-elizabeth-rollins-susan-miller/
CHAPTER 1 Introduction to Professional Billing and Coding Careers
Chapter Spotlight
Chapter 1 presents important information on professional billing and coding careers, including employment demands and trends, job descriptions, professional memberships, and the medical billing and coding certifications that are valuable for career advancement.
Resources
• Text
• Student Workbook
• MyHealthProfessionsLab
• TestGen
• Instructor’s Manual
• Chapter 1 PowerPoint Lecture
Pretest
True/False Questions
1. Before 1973, it was common for a physician to have a solo practice. (True)
2. Managed care allows claims to be paid promptly, within 30 days of filing. (False) (Managed care claims may be paid 30 days or longer after filing.)
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3. Physicians and nurses comprise 80% of all healthcare providers. (False) (Physicians and nurses comprise only 40% of all healthcare providers. The rest are allied healthcare professionals.)
4. Allied healthcare professionals include physicians and nurses. (False) (Physicians and nurses are distinct from allied healthcare professionals.)
5. Physicians, nurses, and allied health employees are all members of the healthcare team. (True)
Learning Objectives
1. Recognize different types of facilities that would employ allied health personnel.
2. Define job descriptions pertaining to a position.
3. Discuss options available for certification.
Learning Objective Lesson Plans
Lesson #1
Objective
1. Recognize different types of facilities that would employ allied health personnel.
Lesson Plan
PPT Slides 5-8 (1-4 Introduction)
• Textbook: pages 4–6
• IM
Classroom Activities:
1a. Make flash cards for key terms to facilitate memorization.
1b. List facilities that utilize billing and coding professionals.
INSTRUCTOR NOTES:
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INDEPENDENT PRACTICE/HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT:
Workbook pages: 1–9
Lesson #2 Objective Lesson Plan
2. Define job descriptions pertaining to a position.
PPT Slides 9-31
• Textbook: pages 6–12
• Table 1.1: pages 9–10
• IRM
Classroom Activities:
2a. Ask students to research various healthcare facilities in the area and discuss which allied healthcare positions would be utilized.
2b. List and define the medical office specialist’s job titles and responsibilities.
2c. Have students pull job descriptions from different job search sites on the Internet and discuss as a class.
INSTRUCTOR NOTES:
INDEPENDENT PRACTICE/HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT:
Workbook pages: 1–9
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The Project Gutenberg eBook of History of Christian names
This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
Title: History of Christian names
Author: Charlotte M. Yonge
Release date: March 30, 2023 [eBook #70419]
Language: English
Original publication: United Kingdom: Macmillan and Co, 1884
Credits: MWS, KD Weeks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF CHRISTIAN NAMES ***
Transcriber’s Note:
Footnotes have been collected at the end of each section, and are linked for ease of reference.
The alphabetic portion of the Glossary (pp. xviii–cxliii), which serves as an Index, was printed in two columns, which cannot be duplicated in a ‘pageless’ medium. Nearly all entries reference the physical page in the main section of the volume where it is discussed, and are linked for navigation.
Tables that fell within a paragraph are moved to the nearest paragraph break.
Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding the handling of any textual issues encountered during its preparation.
The empty cover image has been modified to contain basic title page information, and, so modified, is placed in the public domain.
Any corrections are indicated as hyperlinks, which will navigate the reader to the corresponding entry in the corrections table in the note at the end of the text.
HISTORY OF CHRISTIAN NAMES
BY CHARLOTTE M. YONGE,
NEW EDITION, REVISED. London MACMILLAN AND CO. 1884
All rights reserved.]
AUTHOR OF “THE HEIR OF REDCLYFFE,” “UNKNOWN TO HISTORY,” ETC. ETC.
[
LONDON R. CLAY, SONS, AND TAYLOR, PRINTERS, BREAD STREET HILL.
PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION.
I cannot put forth this attempt without a few words of apology for having undertaken it at all. The excuse is, chiefly, the attraction that the subject has had for me for at least twenty years, from the time when it was first taken up as matter of amusement. The difficulty of gaining information, and the inconsistencies of such as I did acquire, convinced me that the ground was almost untrodden; but the further I advanced on it, the more I perceived that it required a perfect acquaintance with language, philology, ethnology, hagiology, universal history, and provincial antiquities; and to me these were so many dark alleys, up which I only made brief excursions to knock my head against the wall of my own ignorance.
But the interest of the subject carried me on—often far beyond my depth, when the connection between names and words has lured me into the realms of philology, or where I have ventured upon deductions of my own. And I have ventured to lay the result of my collections before the public, in the hope that they may at least show the capabilities of the study of comparative nomenclature, and by classifying the subject, may lead to its being more fully studied, as an illustration of language, national character, religion, and taste.
Surnames and local names have been often discussed, but the Christian name has been usually considered too fortuitous to be worthy of notice. Camden did indeed review the current ones of his own day, and gave many correct explanations, chiefly from the German author Luther Dasipodius. Verstegen followed him up, but was more speculative and less correct; and since that date (as far as I am aware) no English author has given any real trustworthy information to the subject, as a subject. A few lists of names and meanings now and then have appeared in magazines and popular works, but they have generally been copies of Verstegen, with childishly shallow and incorrect additions. One paper which long ago appeared in
Chambers’ Journal, was the only really correct information on English names en masse that I have met with.
The Anglo-Saxon names had been, however, treated of by Sharon Turner in his history, and Mr. Kemble put forth a very interesting lecture on Names, Surnames, and Nicknames among the Anglo-Saxons. Thierry, moreover, gives several explanations, both of Saxon and Frank ones, in the notes to his Conquête d’Angleterre and Récits des Rois Mérovingiens. These were groundwork. Neither Turner nor Thierry is always right, for want of having studied the matter comparatively; but they threw light on one another, and opened the way to the dissection of other names, neglected by them, with the aid of an Anglo-Saxon dictionary.
The Scriptural class of names was studied with less difficulty. Every Hebrew one has been fully discussed and examined by the best scholars; and the Greek, both biblical and classical, have received the same attention, and are in fact the most easy of all, as a class. With regard to Latin, much must be doubtful and inexplicable, but the best information at present attained to was easily accessible.
The numerous race of German appellations has received full attention from many ripe German philologists, and I have made much use of their works. The Scandinavian class has been most ably treated by Professor Munch of Christiania, in a series of contributions to the Norsk Maanedskrifts, of which I have been kindly permitted to make free use, and which has aided me more than any other treatise on Teutonic nomenclature.
Our Keltic class of names has presented far greater difficulties. for the Cymric department, I have gathered from many quarters, the safest being Lady Charlotte Guest’s notes to the Mabinogion and M. de Villemarqué’s elucidations of King Arthur’s romances, Rees’s Welsh Saints, Williams’s Ecclesiastical Antiquities, and Chalmers’s Caledonia; the least safe, Davies’s various speculations on British antiquities and the Cambro-Briton. These verified by Dr. Owen Pugh’s Welsh Dictionary, and an occasional light from Diefenbach and Zeuss, together with a list kindly extracted for me from the Brut, have been my authorities in the Welsh and Breton departments. In the Erse and Gaelic names I was assisted by a very kind letter from the lamented Dr. O'Donovan, whose death deprived me of his promised revision of this extremely difficult class, and left me to make it out to the best of my ability from his contributions to the publications of the
Archæological Society, from the notes to those of the Ossianic Society, Chalmers’s Caledonia, and the Highland Society’s Gaelic Dictionary.
From the first, however, I had perceived that the curiosity of the study does not lie merely in the meanings of the sounds by which men in one country are distinguished from one another. The changes through which the word passes is one great interest, and for this I had been collecting for years, from dictionaries, books of travels, histories, and popular tales, whenever people were so good as to give the genuine word, instead of translating it into English. Dr. G. Michaelis' Vergleichendes Wörterbuch der Gebrauchlichsten Taufnamen left in me little to desire in this respect, especially with regard to German dialects, and I have used it copiously.
The history of names, however, seemed to have been but little examined, nor why one should be popular and another forgotten—why one should flourish throughout Europe, another in one country alone, another around some petty district. Some of these questions were answered by history, some by genealogy, many more by the tracing of patron saints and their relics and legends. Here my great aid has been a French edition of Alban Butler’s Lives of the Saints, where, in the notes, are many accounts of the locality and translations of relics; also, Mrs. Jamieson’s Sacred and Legendary Art, together with many a chance notice in histories or books of travels. In each case I have tried to find out whence the name came, whether it had a patron, and whether the patron took it from the myths or heroes of his own country, or from the meaning of the words. I have then tried to classify the names, having found that to treat them merely alphabetically utterly destroyed all their interest and connection. It has been a loose classification, first by language, then by meaning or spirit, but always with the endeavour to make them appear in their connection, and to bring out their interest.
In general I have only had recourse to original authorities where their modern interpreters have failed me, secure that their conclusions are more trustworthy than my own could be with my limited knowledge of the subjects, which could never all be sufficiently studied by any one person.
Where I have given a reference it has been at times to the book whence I have verified rather than originally obtained my information, and in matters of universally known history or mythology, I have not always given an authority, thinking it superfluous. Indeed, the scriptural and classical
portion is briefer and less detailed than the Teutonic and Keltic, as being already better known.
I have many warm thanks to render for questions answered and books consulted for me by able and distinguished scholars, and other thanks equally warm and sincere to kind friends and strangers who have collected materials that have been of essential service to me.
Lastly, let me again present my apologies for my presumption, when the necessity of tracing out the source and connections of a word has led me to wander beyond my proper ken; let me hope that apparent affectations may be excused by the requirements of the subject, and express my wish for such corrections as may in time render the work far more accurate and complete. Let it be remembered, that it is the popular belief, not the fact, that spreads the use of a name, and that if there is besides matter that seems irrelevant, it has been rather in the spirit of Marmion’s palmers,—
‘To charm a weary hill With song, romance, or lay. Some ancient tale, or glee, or jest, Some lying legend at the least, They bring to cheer the way.’
March 9th, 1863.
After one-and-twenty years, I have been able to bring out the revised edition for which I have long wished, having noted corrections as they were kindly sent to me, and as I was able to make them. I am sensible that the work is entirely incomplete, and as I have not studied philology much in the interval, I fear the book has not gained by the delay as much as it ought to have done. But at any rate, many errors have been taken out, as well as much that was entirely useless and irrelevant; and as no subsequent publication has taken quite the same ground, I hope that the present form of the History of Christian Names may occupy the niche all the better for the cutting off its excrescences. With thanks to the many who have aided in the correction,
C. M. Y .
July 25th, 1884.
CONTENTS. PAGE G C N xvii INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER. T S N 1 PART I. CHAPTER I. H N 7 CHAPTER II. P N 10 § 1. Adam 10 2. Abi 11 3. Jacob 16 4. Simeon 19 5. Judah 20 6. Joseph 22 7. Benjamin 24 8. Job 26
I N 27 § 1. Moses and Aaron 27 2. Elisheba, &c. 32 3. Joshua, &c. 36 4. Names from Chaanach 39 5. David 46 6. Salem 47 7. Later Israelite Names 48 8. Angelic Names 52 PART II. N P 56 § 1. The Persian Language 56 2. Esther 57 PART III. CHAPTER I. N G 59 CHAPTER II. N G M 61 § 1. 61
CHAPTER III.
2. Names from Zeus 61 3. Hera 63 4. Athene 64 5. Apollo and Artemis 64 6. Hele 66 7. Demeter 69 8. Dionysos 70 9. Hermes 71 10. Heroic Names 73 CHAPTER III. N A , &c. 76 § 1. The Lion 76 2. The Horse 77 3. The Goat 79 4. The Bee 80 5. N F 80 CHAPTER IV. H G N E 82 § 1. Agathos 82 2. Alexander, &c. 83 3. Aner, Andros 85 4. Eu 86 5. Hieros 89 6. Pan 90 7. Polys 92 8. Phile, &c. 93 9. Names connected with the Constitution.—Laos, &c. 95
CHAPTER
C G N 99 § 1. 99 2. Names from Theos 99 3. Names from Christos 104 4. Sophia 106 5. Petros 107 6. Names of Immortality 109 7. Royal Names 111 8. Irene 112 9. Gregorios 113 10. Georgos 114 11. Barbara 116 12. Agnes 118 13. Margaret 119 14. Katharine 121 15. Harvest Names 123 16. Names from Jewels 124 17. Kosmos and Damianos 125 18. Alethea, &c. 126 PART IV. CHAPTER I. L N 127 CHAPTER II. L P 131 § 1. Aulus, Caius, Cnæus, Cæso 131
V.
V.
2. Lucius 132 3. Marcus 134 4. Posthumus, &c. 136 5. Numeral Names 137 CHAPTER III. N 140 § 1. Attius 140 2. Æmilius 140 3. Antonius 141 4. Cæcilius 143 5. Cœlius 145 6. Claudius 145 7. Cornelius, &c. 146 8. Julius 148 9. Lælius, &c. 151 10. Valerius 152 CHAPTER IV. C 155 § 1. 155 2. Augustus 157 3. Blasius 158 4. Cæsar, &c. 159 5. Constantius 161 6. Crispus, &c. 162 7. Galerius, &c. 163 8. Paullus and Magnus 165 9. Rufus, &c. 167 CHAPTER
CHAPTER VI.
N R D 169 § 1. 169 2. Florentius 171 3. Laurentius 172 4. Sancus 175 5. Old Italian Deities 176 6. Quirinus 177 7. Sibylla 178 8. Saturn, &c. 179
M N L 181 § 1. From Amo 181 2. ” Beo 182 3. ” Clarus 185 4. ” Columba 186 5. ” Durans 187 6. Names of Thankfulness 188 7. Crescens, &c. 189 8. Military Names 189 9. Names of Gladness 191 10. Jus 192 11. Names of Holiness 193 12. Ignatius 194 13. Pater 195 14. Grace, &c. 195 15. Vinco 197 16. Vita 197 17. Wolves and Bears 198 18. Names from Places and Nations 199
19. Town and Country 202 20. Flower Names 203 21. Roman Catholic Names 207 CHAPTER VII. N H D 209 § 1. 209 2. Christmas 209 3. The Epiphany 210 4. Easter Names 215 5. Sunday Names 216 PART V. CHAPTER I. § 1. The Keltic Race 220 2. The Keltic Languages 221 3. Keltic Nomenclature 222 CHAPTER II A K N 226 § 1. Welsh Mythic Names 226 2. Lear and his Daughters 228 3. Bri 232 4. Fear, Gwr, Vir 237 CHAPTER III.
G N 240 § 1. Scottish Colonists 240 2. The Feen 242 3. Finn 243 4. Cu, Cun, Gal 245 5. Diarmaid and Graine 249 6. Cormac 250 7. Cath 251 8. Fiachra 252 9. Names of Complexion 253 10. Feidlim, &c. 256 11. Names of Majesty 257 12. Devotional Names 259
N C R 264 § 1. The Round Table 264 2. Arthur 266 3. Gwenever 268 4. Gwalchmai, Sir Gawain, and Sir Owen 272 5. Trystan and Ysolt 274 6. Hoel and Ryence 276 7. Percival 278 8. Llew 281 PART
T N 283
CHAPTER IV.
VI.
CHAPTER I.