Board Thread:False Info and Speculative Discussion/@comment-192.230.165.112-20140420035210/@comment-13965604-20140616213436

76.107.193.183 wrote: Everyone thinks that a name has to be a name. But a name can mean something that has nothing to do with a person. A name can mean an abstract thing. As I'm sure all of you know by now, in Season 1 Episode 5 "The Tell," It shows Stiles' file and all you can see is the last five letters of his first name which are "ienim." I have done a lot of research and I have found only one Polish word that ends in "ienim" and it is Ustanowienim. I have found this word in an old catholic encyclopedia on a paragraph written in old Polish. Ustanowienim is spelled Ustanowienie nowadays and it means establishment which can also mean to erect (establishing a town is the same as erecting a town). During ComicCon 2011 Tyler Posey said the when we find out Stiles' first name that we would crack up. Well, what would be funnier than Stiles' first name meaning erection. During "The Tell," Coach said that Stiles' first name is a form of child abuse. Well if Stiles' first name means erection, then that would be the funniest thing ever, making people "crack up" as Tyler Posey so kindly said. So, I have come to the conclusion that Stiles' full name is in fact' Ustanowienim Stilinski (a.k.a. it means erection - ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, I'm cracking up, can't you tell by my enthusiasm, oh I forgot you can't because your staring at a freaking computer screen and I'm staring at mine and we can't see each other's faces, GOD I'M TIRED OF TYPING AS YOU CAN SEE, SO SEE YOU LATER PEOPLE, and don't forget that I am the one who just solved Jeff Davis' mystery surroundinng Stiles' first name). '

                                                                                                                                                       

'                                                                                                                                               ...oh, and my name is Brandon Rando and I approve this message...  : )'

Actually, we don't know that it's ienim, what looks like an I could be a capital G, and the E could possibly be an O. If they decide to abide by that screen shot at all. Two polish names that could fit would be Hieronim and Heronim, both meaning army, warrior, to rule. The former also meaning sacred name, one who bears a holy name.