Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
List of toponyms
In linguistics and grammar, a toponym is a name derived from a place or a region.
This is a list of toponyms, followed by the name of the place it is derived from.
| Contents |
General
- Acapulco
- Angora
- Armageddon
- Auschwitz
- Babel
- Balkanization, a geopolitical term for the fragmentation of a region — the Balkans, region in southeastern Europe
- Bantustan, a disparaging term used by critics of the Apartheid-era government's "homelands" — territories designated as tribal "homelands" for black South Africans during the Apartheid era
- Bay Street, a synonym for Canada's financial industry (similar to Wall Street) — Hudson's Bay Company in Canada
- Beltway, name for the highway surrounding Washington, D.C.
- Berlin Wall, synonymous of the Cold War — Berlin Wall, separating East Berlin from West Berlin
- Bible, bibliography — Byblos, city on the Mediterranean coast of Lebanon
- Bikini, two-piece bathing suit for women — Bikini Atoll, a Micronesian Island in the Pacific Ocean
- the Blarney and Blarney Stone — Blarney Castle
- Boetian
- Bohemianism, term referring to artists, writers, and disenchanted people who wished to live a non-traditional lifestyle — Bohemia, a region occupying the western and middle thirds of the Czech Republic
- Bombay duck, a kind of fish — Bombay, old name for Mumbai, coastal city in western India
- Brazilianization
- Broadway, street in New York City synonymous with Musical Theater
- Bronx Cheer, a noise made by the mouth to signify derision — The Bronx, a borough of New York City
- Brummagem, goods of shoddy quality — Birmingham, city in England
- Bungalow
- Byzantine
- Canary
- Carthaginian (peace)
- Caucasian, a white person – Caucasus Mountains
- Chautauqua
- China, pottery
- Chinese Wall
- Coach — the village Kocs in Hungary where this vehicle was first made
- Sent to Coventry
- Denim, from de Nîmes – Nimes, France
- Detroit, often used as shorthand for the American automobile industry
- Dijon
- Dixieland music — Dixie or "Dixies land", a nickname for the American South.
- Dollar
- Donnybrook
- Doolally
- Duffel , heavy woollen cloth — Duffel, a town in Belgium
- Eden (place of dubious existence)
- El Dorado
- Essex, 'common' or 'nouveau riche' sensibility — Essex, a county near London
- Fez, (also called tarboosh), a hat — Fez, a city in Morocco
- Finlandization
- Fleet Street
- Georgia, a font — Georgia (U.S. state)
- Gibraltar
- Greek, a language usage ("all Greek to me") — Greek language of Greece
- Gypsies, nomadic peoples in Europe and United States — Egypt
- Havana, cigar – from capital of Cuba
- Hell, usage in language — Hell, mythical place
- Hicksville
- Holland , cotton or linen fabric — Holland
- [[Hollywood], shorthand for the American film industry – Hollywood, district of Los Angeles, California
- Iliad (see Troy)
- Indian
- Java, slang for coffee – from island in Indonesia
- Jersey cattle (also tomato, milk, cream, jumper) — Jersey, one of the Channel Islands
- Labyrinth
- Left Bank, style of life, fashion, or "look" — "Left Bank", bank of the Seine which is to the left, near Paris
- Lesbian, homosexual — Lesbos, island in Greece
- Lilliputian , meaning very small sized — Lilliput, fictional island in the book Gulliver's Travels
- Madison Avenue, a metaphor for advertising — Madison Avenue, a street in New York
- Magenta, colour — Magenta, town in northern Italy
- Marathon, long race — Marathon, Greece, town
- Madras, lightweight cotton fabic — Madras, old name for Chennai, coastal city in southeastern India
- Main Street, name for a generic American community
- Manchester (as in textiles)
- Manila envelopes, Manila fiber — Manila, city in Philippines
- Marseillaise, national anthem of France — Marseille, city in France
- Masada
- Mausoleum, a large and impressive tomb — Mausoleum of Maussollos in Turkey
- Mecca, ultimate destination or activity center — Mecca, holy city in Saudi Arabia
- Mongoloid race — Mongolia, country in northern Asia
- Motown, R & B music – Detroit, Michigan (called the Motor City)
- Maus
- Neanderthal man, known by his fossils — Neanderthal, Germany, valley where the fossils were found
- Nuremberg Trials — Nuremberg, German city where the trials were held
- Olympics, worldwide games — Mount Olympus, tallest mountain in Greece
- Paisley (design), used in shawls — Paisley, Scotland
- Palookaville
- Peoria – symbolic of small-town America
- Peyton Place
- the Rubicon, the point of no return — Rubicon (or Rubico), Latin name for a small river in northern Italy
- Rugby football — Rugby School, in Rugby, central England
- Seltzer (commercial name)
- Shambala
- Shanghai woman, English expression for a prostitute — Shanghai, China's largest city
- Shangri-La, a mythical utopia, a language usage — Shangri-La, fictional place in the novel Lost Horizon
- Siamese twins, conjoined twins — Siam, old name for Thailand
- Siberia, a remote undesirable location — Siberia, in eastern Russia
- Sodomy, forbidden sexual acts — Sodom, Biblical town on the plain of the Jordan River
- Solecism, incorrect or ungrammatical usage of language — Soli, ancient city on the island of Cyprus, where a dialect regarded as substandard was spoken
- Spa, place having water with health-giving properties — Spa, a municipality in Belgium
- Stalingrad
- Surrey, horse-drawn carriage — Surrey, southern England
- Timbuktu, metaphor for an exotic, distant land — Timbuktu, city on the Niger River in Mali, West Africa
- Tin Pan Alley
- Trojan horse, malicious computer virus — Trojan Horse, of Troy, from the Iliad
- Trojaned, as above.
- Utopia, term for organized society — Utopia, fictional republic from the book of the same name
- Wall Street, financial market — Wall Street, a narrow thoroughfare in lower Manhattan running east from Broadway downhill to the East River.
- Watergate, American political scandal and constitutional crisis of the 1970s — Watergate Office Building in Washington, D.C.
- Woodstock Festival, music and art festival held in August, 1969 — venue of the festival Woodstock, New York
- Xanadu, a symbol of opulence — Xanadu (or Shangdu), summer capital of Kublai Khan's empire
- Zion
Events/Agreements
- Hiroshima (Japan) - the atomic bombing of Hiroshima in 1945
- Kyoto (Japan) - the Kyoto Protocol of 1997
- Maastricht (The Netherlands) - the Maastricht treaty of 1992
- Munich (Germany) - the Munich Agreement of 1938
- Oslo (Norway) - the Oslo Accords of 1993
- Potsdam (Germany) - the Potsdam Conference in 1945
- Schengen (Luxembourg) - the Schengen treaty of 1985
- Seattle (Washington) - the Seattle Riots of 1999
- Yalta (Ukraine) - the Yalta Conference of 1945
- Warsaw (Poland) - the Warsaw Pact (1955 - 1991)
- Waterloo (Belgium) - the Battle of Waterloo in 1815
Food and Drink
- Bordeaux
- Burgundy
- Cantaloupe (also called rockmelon), a variety of melon — Cantalupo , the Pope's summer residence
- Champagne
- Cognac
- Cuban, sub sandwich in Florida — Cuba, country in the Caribbean
- Danish, a sweet pastry (in Denmark called wienerbrød (bread from Vienna)).
- Dunkirk spirit
- Frankfurter (or Wiener — from Vienna)
- Hamburger — Hamburg, Germany
- Hollandaise sauce — Holland
- Madeira wine, a fortified wine and Plum in madeira, a dessert — Madeira islands of Portugal
- Manhattan cocktail — Manhattan Club in New York City
- Mocha coffee, ice cream — Mocha, Yemen , place where the coffee is grown
- Peking Duck, a Chinese dish made of duck — Peking, old name for Beijing, China
- Port wine (or Porto), sweet fortified wine — Oporto, in northern Portugal
- Salisbury Steak — Salisbury, England
- Sardine, types of small fish — Sardinia, island in the Mediterranean near Italy
- Sherry wine, a mispronunciation of Jerez — Jerez de la Frontera, a city in southern Spain
Cheese
- American
- Aveyron(nais)
- Caerphilly
- Cheddar
- Cheshire
- Colby
- Derby
- Gloucester
- Gorgonzola
- Gouda
- Gruyere
- Lancashire
- Leicester
- Limburg(er)
- Monterey (Jacks)
- Munster
- Parme(san)
- Roma(no)
- Roquefort
- Stilton
- Swiss
- Tilsit
- Wensleydale
Elements
See: Chemical elements named after places
See also
- Lists of etymologies
- List of eponyms, names derived from people's names
Last updated: 10-17-2005 13:42:58
03-10-2013 05:06:04
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


