Place names considered unusual

Two examples of unusual place names

Unusual place names are names for cities, towns, and other regions which are considered non-ordinary in some manner. This can include place names which are also swear words, inadvertently humorous or highly charged words,[1] as well as place names of unorthodox spelling and pronunciation, including especially short or long names.

Unusual descriptive place names

Westward Ho!, Devon, England, is the only settlement in the British Isles to have an exclamation mark in its name.

Inaccessible Island, a remotely located extinct volcanic island in the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean, is so named for the difficulty in landing on the island and penetrating its interior because of the rough terrain.[2][3][4]

Death Valley, California, one of the hottest locations on Earth, got its English name after 13 pioneers died trying to cross the harsh desert valley during the California Gold Rush of 1849.[5] The highest recorded land temperature, 134 °F (56.7 °C), was recorded inside Death Valley at Furnace Creek, California in 1913.[6]

Fiddletown, California was a Chinese gold mining settlement and is now home to about 235 people at the 2010 census. When the creek went dry the miners were said to be “fiddling around” thus giving the name. One local civilian successfully lobbied to change the name to Oleta, given after his daughter in 1878 because he was embarrassed to be known as the “Man from Fiddletown.” After his death in 1932, the name was restored. Similarly, Gardendale, Alabama was originally named "Jugtown" due to the jug and churn factory around which the town originally grew. Hettie Thomason Cargo, a local school teacher, proposed the name change in 1906 after being embarrassed to admit she was from "Jugtown" at a regional teachers meeting. The town voted to rename itself Gardendale; unlike Fiddletown, the name stuck.[7]

Rough and Ready, California is on the National List of Historic Places. It gets its name from the founder of the town, an Army Captain with Zachary Taylor in his company. Taylor was nicknamed "Rough and Ready" and was later elected president of the United States.

Place names which are homonyms for other words in the same language

Boring, Oregon is named after William H. Boring, who settled in the area in the 1870s.[8] The town name is a homonym for the word boring, and the town often makes puns based on its name. Boring's town motto is "The most exciting place to live" and it has taken on the similarly named Dull, Scotland as its sister city.[9][10][11] Bland Shire, New South Wales, Australia, named for founder William Bland, is also similarly named.[12][13] The county of Essex in southeastern England is home to the village of Ugley, and in the county of Hertfordshire, the hamlet of Nasty, which are only a few miles apart. Yolo County, California was named after a Native American tribe, but it is now considered unusual due to the acronym YOLO, which stands for "you only live once".

Profanity, humorous words or highly charged words

A number of settlements have names that are offensive or humorous in other languages, such as Fucking, Austria.[1] Although as a place name Fucking is benign in German, in English the word is a profanity. Similarly, when they hear of the French town of Condom, English speakers will likely associate it with condoms, a form of barrier contraception.[1][14] Hell, Norway, comes from the old Norse word hellir, which means "overhang" or "cliff cave". In modern Norwegian the word helvete means "hell", while the Norwegian word hell can mean "luck".

Conversely, a number of place names can be considered humorous or offensive by their inhabitants, such as the German towns Affendorf ("Monkey Village"), Faulebutter ("Lazy Butter"), Fickmühlen ("Fuck Mills"), Himmelreich ("Kingdom of Heaven"), which appropriately lies at the edge of the Höllental ("Hell's Valley"), Katzenhirn ("Cat Brain", nearest to Mindelheim), Lederhose (Lederhosen, leather trousers), Neger (Olpe) ("Negro"), Plöd (blöd means "stupid", renamed in 2009), Regenmantel ("Raincoat") and Warzen ("Warts").[15] The US also has the unincorporated community of Hell, Michigan, the historic community of Penile, Louisville in Kentucky, and Pee Pee Township in Ohio. Dildo is a Canadian town and off the coast there is a Dildo Island. Pett Bottom is located 5 miles south of Canterbury, Kent. James Bond lived there with his aunt after his parents died, in the fictional novels by Ian Fleming.

Some placenames are deemed to be offensive or unacceptable, often through historic semantic changes in what is tolerated.[16][17][18]

An example of this would be the once common English street name Gropecunt Lane, whose etymology is a historical use of the street by prostitutes to ply their trade. During the Middle Ages the word cunt may often have been considered merely vulgar, having been in common use in its anatomical sense since at least the 13th century. Its steady disappearance from the English vernacular may have been the result of a gradual cleaning-up of the name; Gropecunt Lane in 13th century Wells became Grope Lane, and then in the 19th century, Grove Lane.[19] In the city of York, Grapcunt Lane (grāp being the Old English word for "grope"[20]) was renamed Grope Lane and is now called Grape Lane.[21] A similar case was in the town of Sasmuan, Pampanga in the Philippines, where it was formerly known as "Sexmoan" based on attempts by Spanish friars to transcribe Sasmuan; it was unanimously changed into Sasmuan in 1991 because of negative sexual connotations associated with the place name.[22][23]

In Canada, the town of Swastika, Ontario adopted its name prior to the Nazi Party's adoption of the swastika as a symbol.

In Spain, a municipality was named Castrillo Matajudíos ("Jew-killer Camp") from 1627 to 2015. Matamoros (Moor killer) however remains a common place name and even the name of several businesses in Spanish speaking countries.

In Hong Kong, a lot of place names contain reference to shit and piss (屎 and 尿 in Chinese, transcribed to Shi and Niu respectively). Some of those settled places have got the name changed to avoid the offensiveness, for example, Ma Liu Shui and Kau Shi Wai, although in the former case the word Niu is just a homonym of another character (Liu, literally meaning playing).

A number of placenames in the United States and Canada historically used the word "nigger", a commonly used but derogatory term for African-Americans. Over the course of the 20th century, many of these placenames were changed because of the negative racist connotations of the word. One example is Dead Nigger Creek in Texas (named to commemorate the Buffalo Soldier tragedy of 1877) which was changed to Dead Negro Draw.[24] Another is Niggerhead Mountain near Malibu, California which was changed to Negrohead Mountain in the 1960s and finally to Ballard Mountain in 2010 for an early African American settler.[25] In Canada, Quebec decided in 2015 to rename 11 places within the province that contained the word "nigger" or the French equivalent, nègre.[26] In 2016 New Zealand renamed three locations which were found to be offensive, Niggerhead, Nigger Hill, and Nigger Stream.[27]

Likewise there is pressure to remove from place names the word "squaw", a traditional term for a Native American woman now considered derogatory. In 2003, Squaw Peak in Phoenix, Arizona was renamed to Piestewa Peak, after Specialist Lori Ann Piestewa, killed in action during Operation Iraqi Freedom.[28]

Other name changes

Sometimes settlement names are changed as a publicity stunt or to promote tourism.

Waters, Arkansas changed its name to Pine Ridge, Arkansas after it became known that the radio sitcom Lum and Abner had based the fictional town in which it was set, Pine Ridge, on Waters. Now a sparsely populated and no longer incorporated community, Pine Ridge is home to a Lum and Abner museum.[29]

Truth or Consequences, New Mexico changed its name from Hot Springs in 1950, after the host of the television show Truth or Consequences promised free publicity to any town willing to change its name to that of the show.[30] Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania changed its name from Mauch Chunk in honor of the famous athlete when his widow agreed to allow his remains to be buried there.

In 1999, the town of Halfway, Oregon changed its name to Half.com, after the e-commerce start-up of the same name, for one year in exchange for $110,000, 20 computers for the school, and other financial subsidies.[31]

Saint Augusta, Minnesota was for a short time named Ventura, Minnesota after the then-governor Jesse Ventura (whose ring name was in turn named after the city of Ventura, California) to draw attention in avoiding annexation by the nearby city of Saint Cloud.[32] The name was reverted to the original name after the crisis passed.

Unorthodox spelling or pronunciation

The railway station sign in the town of Llanfairpwllgwyngyll­gogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch, Wales, gives an approximation of the correct pronunciation for English speakers
Webster, Massachusetts firefighter's patch with the longest version of "Webster Lake's" name on its circumference

Unorthodox spelling or pronunciation, particularly short or long names, and names derived from unusual sources are often seen as unusual, especially by people outside the culture which named them. The Welsh village Llanfairpwllgwyngyll­gogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch changed its name in the 1860s from the shorter Llanfairpwllgwyngyll to increase its publicity. At 58 letters, it has the longest place name in the UK.[33] The body of fresh water in Webster, Massachusetts that has historically (since at least 1921) borne the apparently Native American 45-letter/fourteen-syllable name Lake Chargoggagoggmanch­auggagoggchaubunagungamaugg is usually shortened, for instance on road maps, to using only the final six syllables from its "long form"; as Lake Chaubunagungamaug, or even more simply to "Webster Lake".

Conversely, there are several settlements whose name consists of only one letter. A number of Scandinavian towns are named Å. The name often comes from the Old Norse word Ár, meaning small river. Examples include: Å, Åfjord; Å, Meldal; Å, Lavangen; and Å, Tranøy.[34] The Netherlands has IJ (Amsterdam), formerly spelled Y.

There are a number of place names that seem unusual to English speakers because they do not conform to standard English orthography rules. Examples include the Welsh towns of Ysbyty Ystwyth and Bwlchgwyn which appear to English speakers to contain no vowel characters, although y and w represent vowel sounds in Welsh.[35] Aioi, Japan; Eiao, Marquesas Islands; Aiea, Hawaii;[note 1] Oia, Greece; and Ii, Finland on the other hand, contain only vowels and no consonants.[36]

Unusual names may also be created as a result of error by the naming authority. An example is Rednaxela Terrace in Hong Kong, which is believed to be the name Alexander but erroneously written right-to-left (the normal practice writing Chinese in the past), and the name has stayed and even transcribed back to Chinese phonetically.

Road sign theft

As a result of increased notoriety, road signs are commonly stolen in Fucking, Austria, as souvenirs[37] — the only crime which has been reported in the village.[38] It cost some 300 euros to replace each stolen sign, and the costs were reflected in the taxes that local residents pay.[39] In 2004, owing mainly to the stolen signs, a vote was held on changing the village's name, but the residents voted against doing so.[40] Tarsdorf municipality's mayor Siegfried Höppl stated that it was decided to keep the name as it had existed for 800 years,[40] and further stated that "everyone here knows what it means in English, but for us Fucking is Fucking—and it's going to stay Fucking."[41]

In 2010, the inhabitants of Shitterton, Dorset, purchased a 1.5-ton block of Purbeck Stone to place at the entrance to Shitterton, carved with the hamlet's name to prevent theft.[42] A truck and crane were hired by volunteers to put the stone in place at a total cost of £680.[42][43]

See also

Notes

  1. Aiea has an initial glottal stop in Hawaiian, which was dropped in English orthography.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Pike, Steven (6 August 2012). Destination Marketing. Routledge. p. 230. ISBN 978-1-136-00265-6.
  2. "History of Inaccessible Island, South Atlantic Ocean". Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 2014-07-24.
  3. "Inaccessible Island". Tristandc.com. Retrieved 2013-08-06.
  4. Édouard Ducéré, Histoire maritime de Bayonne: Les corsaires sous la̓ncien régime (Bayonne, 1895:307-24) reproduces the sieur d'Etcheverry's manuscript narrative of his voyage to Moluccas in 1770 in the Etoile du Matin and mentions a second voyage in 1772.
  5. Lingenfelter, Richard E.; Dwyer, Richard A. (1988). Death Valley Lore, Classic Tales of Fantasy, Adventure and Mystery. Reno: University of Nevada Press. ISBN 0-87417-136-9.
  6. "World Meteorological Organization World Weather / Climate Extremes Archive". Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  7. "Gardendale History". City of Gardendale, AL. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  8. "Boring History". Boring CPO.com. Retrieved 2015-10-27.
  9. Gambino, Lauren. "Dull and Boring? Sounds exciting". KVAL. Archived from the original on 22 October 2013. Retrieved February 22, 2013.
  10. LeVeille, David. "A Tale of Dull and Boring Sister Cities". The World.org. Archived from the original on 30 June 2013. Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  11. BBC News - Boring in Oregon votes to pair with Dull in Perthshire
  12. "Bland, Dull and Boring: Three towns team up to excite tourists". MSN. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  13. Baskas, Harriet (2014-04-25). "Dull, Boring and Bland Team Up to Lure Tourists". NBC News. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  14. Lyall, Sarah (22 January 2009). "No Snickering: That Road Sign Means Something Else". The New York Times.
  15. "Schluss mit Plöd! - Wie ein lustiger Ortsname zur Last wird". TZ (in German). Munich. 14 November 2008.
  16. Kenney, Michael (30 May 2006). "Geographer explores place names that offend - The Boston Globe". Boston.com. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  17. Adams, Guy (28 February 2010). "Americans redraw the map to erase 'offensive' names - Americas, World". London: The Independent. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  18. "UK | England | Sussex | Council lists banned road names". BBC News. 4 January 2009. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  19. Briggs, Keith (1 April 2010), "OE and ME cunte in place-names" (PDF), Journal of the English Place-name Society, 41, 26–39, keithbriggs.info, retrieved 7 July 2010
  20. http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/grope
  21. http://mediafiles.thedms.co.uk/Publication/YK/cms/pdf/12-media-culture-Snickleways%202013.pdf
  22. "Santa Lucia Church, Sasmuan, Pampanga". Retrieved 15 January 2015.
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  25. "From Niggerhead to Negrohead to Ballard, a Mountain Finally Gets A Decent Name".
  26. "No more place names that contain the N-word allowed, Quebec commission rules". CBC News. Retrieved 2018-02-13.
  27. "New Zealand drops racially offensive place names". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2017-06-07.
  28. Fischer, Howard (April 17, 2003). "Board renames Squaw Peak after Piestewa". Arizona Daily Sun. Retrieved July 12, 2016.
  29. "NRHP nomination for Huddlestone Store and McKinzie Store" (PDF). Arkansas Preservation. Retrieved 2015-10-12.
  30. Carpenter, Cindy; Fletcher, Sherry (2010). Truth Or Consequences. South Carolina, USA: Arcadia Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 9780738579177.
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  32. Minnesota Public Radio, 24 January 2000. http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/200001/24_helmsm_ventura-m/ Retrieved 5 May 2015.
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  34. Rygh, Oluf (1901). Norske gaardnavne: Søndre Trondhjems amt (in Norwegian) (14 ed.). Kristiania, Norge: W. C. Fabritius & sønners bogtrikkeri. p. 23.
  35. Rowland, Paul (1 November 2013). "14 Welsh Place Names With No (English) Vowels". Wales Online.
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  38. Harnden, Toby (28 August 2005). "'No, there are no F***ing postcards'". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 7 November 2009.
  39. "What's the F---ing joke?". The Age. 3 September 2005. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  40. 1 2 "Brits steal carloads of F**king Austrian roadsigns", The Register, 15 August 2005.
  41. Haywood, Anthony; Walker, Kerry (2008). Austria (5 ed.). Lonely Planet. p. 217. ISBN 1-74104-670-X. Retrieved 7 November 2009.
  42. 1 2 "Sign Of The Times: Shitterton Hits Back". Sky News. 23 July 2010. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
  43. "Village 'amusing' name set in stone". Belfast Telegraph. 23 July 2010. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
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