Names
Sauna (Saun)
Bath-house, sauna. Street thus-named since the 15th C at least: bastouenstrate (1419) and (the slightly less Scandinavian- and more MLG-sounding) stovenstrate (1420). Word also means small farm or cottage, but this was long before the shift towards steamier haunts. EES suggests an early German origin for the word, *stakka-, giving English stack as in hay and chimneys, which seems vaguely possible, the ‘t’ could disappear, but ‘k’ to ‘n’? Also, Swedish has its own word for sauna, bastu, from bad, bath, and stuga, small house, related to English stove, from early Germanic stubā and stupā, so although the idea of chimneys and smoke may be tempting, an st- start to the word is probably a red (unsmoked) herring. Another EES possibility is its originating in an early Germanic ‘*sāpna-’ for soap (or *saipôn), originally deriving from a term referring to the red substance warriors colored their hair with (presumably to make them look more ferocious rather than alluring) which also gave the Finnish word for soap saippua, but this seems too remote, and *saipôn is already a cognate of MLG sēpe (see Seebi). What appears to be the safest clue is – other than its Finnish, Livonian, Votic, etc. cognates deriving from early Proto-Finnic *sakńa meaning sauna in the broad sense (see above) – its use in Sami languages: suovdnji, hole dug in the snow (by birds, such as the willow grouse) and suodji, shelter, and historical Karelian soakna for “winter dwelling, a pit dug into snow for temporary shelter”, the commonality being a constructed shelter providing warmth. Case still open.
Saunatagune torn (0) 
Tower behind the baths/sauna. Little of the tower remains today, barely the ground floor, inside a house on Nunne. See also Stoltingi torn.
Saunatorn (0) 
Sauna tower. Built in 1371-1372 and initially belonging to the nearby Cistercian convent. See also Saunatagune torn.
Saviliiva (Saviliiv)
Loam, mild clay, sandy loam. Mini-group of road-material-related roads. See Veerise.
Seedri (Seeder)
Cedar, Cedrus spp. Any in Estonia are introduced. Began life (1925) as Turgenevi / Тургеневская but, like his first love, crush crushed by another type of seeder.







