Ħautar delûr

The Ħautar delûr (lit. 'honourable people', Ħautkar pronunciation [ˈħɑu̯.t̪ɛr ˈd̪i.lur]) are a people living in the eastern mountainous part of Kóty. Due to long interaction with the Tehele peoples, they share similar cultural characteristics and mythology, and share many loan words.

Names
The Ħautar people have very complex names, usually amounting to the following:

1) a 'nomen' or rêk - these usually have no obvious derivation, the set of them is quite small; one of those which has a known derivation is turen which is derived from tûr 'fire'. 2) a 'cognomen' or utuar - these are usually sentence-names, for instance "they-sit-atop-mountains" bâte-ʔutkan-lar or "they-work-bronze" getâxte-hirkâda 3) a 'patronymic' or lêfek - pretty straightforward, with mdar 'offspring, child, fresh water' (but not rain) put before it, with the father's rêk in the genitive case. This is then followed by a 'grand-matronym' or iurek, that is, the paternal-grandmother's rêk. This is attached with mruʔ mdar 'himself the child of'. The following combinations are used in address: rěk alone rêk + lêfek rêk + iurek utuar alone

An example name:
Mteni getâxte-iluṭ mdar-Turenek mruʔ mdar-Uṣṭik Mteni, the glassworker, the son of Turen, himself the son of Uṣṭi

This person would usually be addressed in the following ways: "Mteni!" or "Mteni (mdar-)Turenek!" or "Mteni (mdar-)Uṣṭik!" or "Getâxte-iluṭ!" (rarer)