Names
Seegihoov (0)
Almshouse / Hospital / Leprosarium / Poorhouse courtyard. Plot of land surrounding Jaani Seek, the St-John’s Almshouse.
Seegitagune torn (0) 
Tower behind the almshouse. One of Tallinn’s former defensive towers, built 1450(ish), demolished 19th C. Located on the city side of the Metskits statue, see Kitseaed.
Seemne (Seeme)
Seed, also semen, sperm, but that would be a slippery path for any street-name commission to take, but see Kalevala.
Seene (Seen)
Mushroom. Known until 1922 as Pavlovi after, sincerely, we hope, the Pavlov (Ива́н Пе́трович Па́влов, 1849-1936).
Seli (?) 
Named after a nearby farm, although the origin of the name is as obscure as the actual avenue (puiestee) itself which looks more like a footpath that gives up before it gets there. One red herring is the Seli Mõis 45 km south of Tallinn recorded to have belonged to Pirita convent in 1474 (the MLG for German Seele [soul] was sēle which, other than morphing into English ‘silly’, is as tempting as it’s misleading...). Given expressions such as selili for ‘on one’s back’ or selildi for ‘back to back’, placenames like Selimägi aka Seljamäe küla (hillslope village) are clearly related to Selja, and Seli derives from either this or seljandik (range of hills). Soviet occupation renaming (1982-1994) as Jüriöö.
Selise (Selis)
Headrope (leading rope on a net). Also bolt-rope (rope sewed along the perimeter of sails to prevent tearing). Part of a fishing-tackle group, see also Sikuti.







