Name for a geographical entity or location.
Sinònims
Examples for "toponym"
Examples for "toponym"
1A sense of jeopardised identity and wounded pride fused with a toponym to produce an explosive compound.
2By the end of 1917, some 2,500 toponyms had been changed.
1Chen said she was simply stating the facts, and that Taiwan is a geographic name, not a national name.
2The country will officially retain its full name but Czechia will become the short geographic name, as "France" is to "The French Republic".
3Legislation has been passed enabling Whanganui and Wanganui to be used as alternative official geographic names.
4Well, the Bombay family has a lot of weird traditions, including the assigning of geographic names to their progeny.
5Writer quotes from its recent publication, Decisions on Geographic Names in the United States, January through March, 1972, Decision List No.
1Flickr Places also allows users to search by more than 100,000 geographic place names to find photos that might interest them.
1Of course, you know it is simply a geographical name.
2Even Columbus, fine old gentleman that he was, absolutely ignored Isabella as a geographical name.
3This told Godfrey nothing, neither the geographical name borne by the island, nor its position in the Pacific.
4It is strange how an obscure geographical name may force its way into our lives, never to be forgotten.
5One day, Captain Len Guy proposed that we should give a geographical name to the region whither the iceberg had carried us.
6While Karl Kosti had come from the once thickly populated land masses half the planet away which had borne the geographical name of "Europe."
7What is the origin of the geographical names Andalusia, Burgundy, England, and France?
8What was the origin of the geographical names Russia, Greenland, Finland, and Normandy?
9The orthography of geographical names is after the Russian model.
10The steps of English history may be traced to a considerable extent by geographical names.
11UN hosts conference on standardisation of geographical names.
12The geographical names are typical of the people.
13In this, as in so many cases, whole chapters of history are wrapped up in geographical names.
14Anomia for common names and geographical names with preserved retrieval of names of people: A semantic memory disorder.
15Theydon explained his friend's theory of geographical names in the British Isles, and on that lightly humorous note the ladies disappeared.
16As part of the redress the Crown will invite Ngāti Maniapoto to develop a list of new geographical names for features within the area.
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Translations for geographical name