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Favourite Place names
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ntropy



Joined: 11 Oct 2003
Posts: 671
Location: ghurba

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 5:09 am    Post subject: Favourite Place names Reply with quote

What are your favourite place names for cities/towns?

As a resident of the Great White North (it's snowing as i type: IN MAY!!!), I'm partial to:

1) Moose Factory,Ontario

2) Medicine Hat, Alberta

3) Dildo, Newfoundland

What hits your crank?
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CountryClub



Joined: 21 Oct 2003
Posts: 46
Location: China

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 5:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hell, Michigan. I hear it does freeze over. Laughing
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khmerhit



Joined: 31 May 2003
Posts: 1874
Location: Reverse Culture Shock Unit

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 5:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Woolloomooloo Bay, Sydney, Australia--
it also the name of a bar, of course.

There is, you will not be surprised to hear, a science dedicated to the study of name, including place names. I think it's called onomastics. hang on...

http://www.google.ca/search?q=cache:YgmFsROfvf4J:libraryweb.utep.edu/onomastics.html+onomastics&hl=en&ie=UTF-8



yeah--onomastics is the study of names, and toponymics the study of place names.

Deeply cool! Cool
Quote:
he story is told, perhaps apocryphally, of a tribe in Nyassaland, Africa, that took its names from a publisher's book catalog that had found its way into their hands. The chief christened himself Oxford University Press. �Ox, as his friends may have called him, had chosen his name in one of the more unusual ways. Typically, first names are formed from compounds, from saints' names, from places, from personal traits -- in fact, from many things other than publisher's book catalogs.



http://www.google.ca/search?q=cache:djb_9xDmwQAJ:www.langmaker.com/ml0103a.htm+onomastics&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
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Aramas



Joined: 13 Feb 2004
Posts: 874
Location: Slightly left of Centre

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 6:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm told there's a town in Scotland called Twatt Smile
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curveegrrl



Joined: 07 May 2003
Posts: 39
Location: Utsunomiya, Japan

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 6:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Last weekend I went to Hel, Poland. I had a great time asking "where the Hel are we?" and "What in Hel is that?"

AND in Hel, there is a seal enclosure where about 6 seals live (I couldn't count them all . . . they just kept swimming!) But the Polish word for seal is foka so the place was a fokarium. Hee! We went to the fokarium in Hel, to watch them feed the little fokas!

Yes, I am 12.
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gugelhupf



Joined: 24 Jan 2004
Posts: 575
Location: Jabotabek

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 7:00 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

In the now defunct mining area of County Durham in the UK there is a miserable, windswept place called "Paradise". It is a huddle of tatty terraced houses set in a bleak hilly wasteland where the sun seems never to shine. With not a little irony, the local authorities have erected a municipal road-sign proclaiming "Welcome to Paradise".
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been_there



Joined: 28 Oct 2003
Posts: 284
Location: 127.0.0.1

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 7:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Lake Titicaca
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RVN



Joined: 05 May 2003
Posts: 62
Location: China

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 8:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

William Wordsworth used to live in Cockermouth, in the Lake District. There's also a place in the south of England called Brown Willy, although I think Willy maybe spelt Willie.
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dez



Joined: 02 Jul 2003
Posts: 52

PostPosted: Mon May 10, 2004 8:49 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Greenland
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