Names
Männi (Mänd)
Pine. harilik mänd, Scots pine, Pinus sylvestris. Commonest tree in Estonia: almost 40% of Estonian trees are pine. First known as Promenaadi until 1922, and thence to its current name via Männa, from Männas (1926-1927), meaning either ‘verticil’, a whorl or circular arrangement of, e.g., petals on a flower or leaves on a stem, or from Männa, also from Mänd, meaning a wooden whisk, possibly pine (but see Masti). Either way, next came the expected 1940-1941 switch to Ladva (from Latv), meaning treetop or... vertex.
Männiku (Männik) 
Pine wood, pine grove. Street leads to corresponding Sub-district. Street is part of the E67 from Helsinki to Prague. Despite being a station on the Tallinn-Türi Kitsarööpa line, not part of the relevant group.
Männiliiva (Männiliiv)
Pine sand. What it is and why anyone would want to use it to name a street is anyone’s guess.







