Names are important.  They are part of the object per se as well as the culture it came from. Remember Grimm Brothers? If you know the name of Rumpelstilskin, you have power over him.  
Names were given to the weapons by masters and owners, they often have meanings and clues that  the form and the function would miss.  
 David and Alan , both "krisologists" would undoubtedly bristle an the erroneous use of a name for a tiny hook at the base of a kris, and rightfully so! ( they are probably already seething by now, since I wrote kris, and not keris:-))) 
 
Koummya and shibria are just curved knives, a variants of jambia ( or khanjar:-) 
 But just their names give us full info about the culture they came from and their appearance. 
 
Stone ( of blessed memory) put Parang Nabur from Banjarmasin and Minasbad from Bicol in the same picture: one of his few obvious errors. Would  he do it  if he knew that they had different names? But they looked so much alike ! :-) 
 
Names are integral parts of everything around us, they are what we use to orient ourselves in this confusing world.  Semasiologists maintain that most of our problems stem from our imprecision  in defining what exactly each and every word means. 
 
Ignorance of a correct name, or just mis-spelling  can land us in  St. Paul, MN instead of San Paulo, Brazil :-)
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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