As it looks like, "Yargo" is stemming from the same root as "George", or the old Greek "georgos", meaning "the one that is working with the ground/earth" (from "gae/gaia", earth, and "ergon", work).
At this moment, I'm too lazy to write much about myself; you may have a look at my homepage. Ok, here some briefing:
Hello! (Yargo was also a science fiction novel by Jacqueline Suzann, wasn't it?) -- User:RjLesch
Welcome to Wikipedia, Yargo. I was hoping to see you show up here, I'm sure you'll have a lot to contribute. -- JZ
As it looks like, "Yargo" is stemming from the same root as "George", or the old Greek "georgos", meaning "the one that is working with the ground/earth" (from "gae/gaia", earth, and "ergon", work).
At this moment, I'm too lazy to write much about myself; you may have a look at my homepage. Ok, here some briefing:
Hello! (Yargo was also a science fiction novel by Jacqueline Suzann, wasn't it?) -- User:RjLesch
Welcome to Wikipedia, Yargo. I was hoping to see you show up here, I'm sure you'll have a lot to contribute. -- JZ