• Skua
    link
    fedilink
    281 month ago

    Going down Wikipedia’s list of municipalities in Georgia I see Garden City, Iron City, Junction City, Lake City, Lumber City, Mountain City, Peachtree City, Ray City, Sale City, Twin City, and Union City. Despite the “city” element, a good number of them are towns of a few hundred people and wouldn’t be easy to spot on a map

    Edit: same method for Hawai’i shows Hawaiian Acres, Hawaiian Paradise Park, Hawaiian Ocean View, and Hawaiian Beaches

    • @Tilgare
      link
      51 month ago

      I guess it doesn’t take very many to make the map if there are no/few other identifiable naming conventions. Fair strategy scrolling municipalities on Wikipedia - thanks for that.

    • FundMECFS
      link
      fedilink
      -31 month ago

      I’m sorry but you americans are so uncreative for town names. Couldn’t you have just kept whatever the natives called that land, because the american names are so boring.

      • @mercano
        link
        71 month ago

        Indigenous names are heavily used. Half the states have Native American derived names, a much larger proportion than I thought. Pre-European population density was much lower, though so there were a lot fewer settlements to name.

      • Skua
        link
        fedilink
        61 month ago

        I’m not American. But also, most place names are like this, they’ve just been through enough years of language changes and conquests for the obviousness to be obscured. Beijing and Tokyo are “northern capital” and “eastern capital” respectively, for example. Hawai’i either is named after the guy that discovered the big island or just means “homeland”. “Denali” means “tall”

        • FundMECFS
          link
          fedilink
          1
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          Of course, but that was back in the days when travelling to the next village over had a different dialect, by the time you were three villages over, the language would start to shift, so there is a great diversity in names because of a diversity in language. The US everything is english (with a little spanish and native languages but not enough) so it kind of ruins it.

      • Celediel
        link
        fedilink
        English
        31 month ago

        Come on over to Washington where we have places like Seattle, Tacoma, Puyallup, Snohomish, Skykomish, Sammamish, Snoqualmie, and Issaquah, just to name a few.

        We just have a looot of towns, so a bunch get boring names.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        21 month ago

        NJ has a lot: Lopatacong, Paramus, Manahawkin, Absecon, Piscataway, Manalapan, Cinnaminson, Hackensack, Parsippany, Teaneck, Manasquan, Raritan - just to name a few!