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Toponyms challenge

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December 12, 2003, 22:31
wordcrafter
Toponyms challenge
Now that we have a page of eponyms (words from people's names), it seems sensibly symmetric to have a page of toponyms (words from places' names).

I enlist your help! May I ask each of you to pull out your thinking cap and toss out a toponym or two or twelve?

A couple of guidelines:
December 13, 2003, 20:05
Kalleh
I found a fascinating discussion of the word ghetto from an online site of topoynms. This word originated from the Latin word for throw, or "jacere," also the etymology of "project", "inject", "jet", and "adjective."

"Ghetto" originally meant "foundry." "Venetian getto" is the word for a foundry for artillery. As the site of such a foundry, a Venetian island was named "Getto." Jews were forced to live there because of persecution, and that's how "Ghetto" became the word for cramped quarters.
December 14, 2003, 12:12
<Asa Lovejoy>
OK, Kaleh, while we're on the Jewish theme, how about Jerusalem artichoke, or Jerusalem cricket? How about all those towns named, "Salem?" How about porto, or just plain port wine? And "meander" comes from a river of that appelation.
December 14, 2003, 20:35
Kalleh
cantaloupe named after the Pope's summer residence in Cantalupo.

bikini after the Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands

And, here is one of my favorites:

Brobdingnag: from Brobdingnag, a country in Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift, where everything was enormous. It's the adjective of choice when more prosaic modifiers such as huge, colossal, and mammoth just won't cut the verbal mustard.

[This message was edited by Kalleh on Sun Dec 14th, 2003 at 22:00.]
December 15, 2003, 18:31
shufitz
"Brobdinagian" reminds me of a long-ago thread, which mention three others from Gulliver's travels: I'll add utopian.
December 16, 2003, 20:53
Hic et ubique
We talked here about such disparaging terms as french leave, french kiss, and chinese fire drill, and others.

If these are too obvious, there's spartan: simple and severe with no comfort. I wonder if the Athenians had other put-downs of their neighbors that have become more obscure English words.
December 18, 2003, 05:17
Graham Nice
Bristols
Bath Buns
kievs and mini-kievs

Do any of these count as toponyms
December 18, 2003, 20:08
Kalleh
Asa suggested Patagonia in this thread.
December 18, 2003, 20:24
jerry thomas
Patagonia
February 19, 2004, 11:51
Robert Arvanitis
Perhaps we can include the "bialy," the bagel's cousin, named after the town of Bialystok?

RJA
February 19, 2004, 12:07
jerry thomas
Bialystok
February 19, 2004, 16:43
Kalleh
Oh, Jerry, what a wonderfully informative link. Interestingly, Richard and I have been discussing the Holcaust on e-mail recently. He has sent me some excellent links; I had not known there was so much on the Web about the Holocaust.
February 29, 2004, 04:03
museamuse
laconic = brief, concise, terse. From the district of Laconia in the Peloponnese, whose capital was Sparta. The Spartans were known for their terse style of expression.

arcadian = simple and poetically rural.
Again referring to a district in the Peloponnese, Arcadia, considered backward in antiquity (and still pretty backward today).

atticism = extreme elegance of speech. From the district of Attica where Athens is situated.

Of course the word 'toponym' itself is a kind of toponym in the general sense since it is derived from the word 'topos' = place and 'nym' > 'onoma' = name.
February 29, 2004, 04:05
museamuse
Also... what about
hamburger
sandwich
frankfurter?
February 29, 2004, 05:54
arnie
"Sandwich" is really an eponym, because it was named after the Earl of Sandwich, not the town. However, since the Earl was named after the town, I suppose it is a toponym once removed. Roll Eyes