• @[email protected]
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    923 months ago

    Not around here. We named towns after terms from native tribes who were kicked out of the area.

    • Blackout
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      93 months ago

      How do you think we pronounce DeQuindre? Dee-kin-der. How about Livernois? Just add an e at the end and you’ll figure it out. Too our credit we somehow pronounce Cadeiux correctly.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      Fortier pronounced “Forty-er” as in “my fort is more fort-like(fort-y) than your fort”.

    • @GraniteM
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      33 months ago

      I grew up near Calais, Barre, and Charlotte, and none of them are pronounced how you’d think.

  • @RoidingOldMan
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    323 months ago

    They just named it after the place they were from and put “new” in the front.

    • @[email protected]
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      163 months ago

      Most names are essentially just landmarks of some sort.

      Hamburg is derived from Hammer Burg, simply meaning hammer castle.

      Part of Hamburg is Altona, which is lower German for all too near, because it’s really close to Hamburg.

      East of Hamburg is Lübeck, which is means “settlement of the lub”, whoever the lub were.

      Even farther east is Warnemünde, which is located at the mouth (Mund) of the river Warnow.

      Said river is getting pretty wide a bit upstream, which gave the city of Rostock its name (“where the river gets wider”).

      East of that: Stralsund. It’s the sound (the water kind) of Strela.

      And so on and so on.

  • teft
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    193 months ago

    Wait until you learn a second language and start learning town names in a new country. Here we have such amazing town names like “The Eyebrow” and “Camp”.

    (I just chose the silliest ones I know, there are normal town names too)

      • andrew_bidlaw
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        33 months ago

        I like this more than toponyms ending with -pol, -tsk, -nsk, -rsk, and to a lesser extent -iv. It sounds unique and original, not following a template, and somehow fantasy-books-like as it suggests what people probably did there.

        On the other hand, Ukraine has it’s own New York too, just like in OP, and it inspired a lot of memes.

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      A lot of place names in English speaking countries are just names of natural or man-made features, but the etymology isn’t obvious. Like Portsmouth or Waterford are pretty understandable, but -don, -den, -ton (valley, hill, farm) are all just things.

      The Eyebrow’s pretty cool though. Japan’s also got some good ones, like Thousand Leaves, Oak (just oak), or (loosely translated) Noodle Hill. They like numbers too, like Eight Door or Lake Twelve. There’s even a Silent Hill, but it’s not too silent these days with almost 700,000 people there.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 months ago

      We got dead cow, toast meat, nose, of the blacks, beautiful old lady, triangle, burnt car and drowned kids.

  • @[email protected]
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    173 months ago

    Ixonia, Wisconsin solved that problem by just drawing random letters from a hat until they came up with something pronounceable: Ixonia.

    But I’m always amused by the street Oxford Place near my house. It’s a street named after a university, named after a city, named after a shallow spot where cattle could cross the river.

  • @Dagnet
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    163 months ago

    Yep, just Americans look over to New Zeland nobody else for sure

    • @Jiggle_Physics
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      3 months ago

      Or Australia. If it isn’t something from europe, or a indigenous name, it’s something really imaginative, like Northern Territory, Western Australia, and South Australia

  • @Nuke_the_whales
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    153 months ago

    Americans didn’t name these places. There were no Americans when these places were named

    • @TrousersMcPants
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      123 months ago

      Nah we definitely have had places like this named by Americans, too

    • @cmbabul
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      23 months ago

      I feel like Puyallup had to have been named by a drunken southerner

    • @pingveno
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      13 months ago

      Place names in general in the Pacific Northwest. Alaska is from an Aleut phrase. Out of the 36 Oregon counties, 10 have roots in indigenous language or culture.

  • wanderer
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    83 months ago

    The Phoenicians founded a new city in North Africa and called it ‘New City’ (Qart Hadasht), we now call it Carthage. The Carthaginians founded a new city in Spain and called it ‘New City’ (Qart Hadasht). The Romans conquered both of these cities, and found that having cities with the same confusing so called the second one ‘New New City’ (Carthago Nova).

  • @[email protected]
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    83 months ago

    In Alaska there’s a town called Chicken. They wanted to name it after the Ptarmigan that were abundant in the area, but couldn’t agree on the correct spelling.

  • @[email protected]
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    83 months ago

    In Iowa, we have a Madrid, but its pronounced like MADrid. And a town named Nevada, but pronounced NeVAYda.