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German toponymy - Wikipedia German toponymy Placenames in the German language area can be classified by the language from which they originate, and by era
Appendix:German toponyms - Wiktionary, the free dictionary This appendix lists words and morphemes used to form the names of places This page was last edited on 26 October 2017, at 19:00 Definitions and other text are available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
German toponymy explained What is German toponymy? Explaining what we could find out about German toponymy
German toponymy - Wikiwand from classical times, when the southern and western parts of the German language area belonged to the Roman Empire Examples: Koblenz (from Confluentes "joining rivers"), Köln (Cologne) (from Colonia "colony"), Aachen (from Aquae "springs"), Augsburg and Augst (from Augusta "city of Augustus " and the Germanic suffix -burg)
German toponymy - EverybodyWiki Bios Wiki German place names derived from other languages Celtic names, used in prehistoric times in the southern and western parts of the German language area
An Ontology of German Place Names - OpenEdition Journals 11All German toponyms agree in terms of linguistic gender with determiners, adjectives and, anaphoric as well as relative pronouns etc associated with the toponyms: der Rhein ‘the Rhine’ (masc ) vs die Donau ‘the Danube’ (fem )
German toponymy - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia Placenames in the German language area can be classified by the language from which they originate, and by their age ach, (river) Examples Echternach, Salzach au (from Slavic suffix ov, w)
(PDF) Semantic Features of German Toponyms - Academia. edu The semantic analysis of German place names allowed us to distinguish eight groups of toponyms: (1) names related to the settlement and cultivation of land; (2) names related to religious activities; (3) names related to legal relations; (4) names related to material culture; (5) physical and geographical names; (6) names reflecting flora and
Germanic toponymy - Wikipedia Germanic toponyms are the names given to places by Germanic peoples and tribes Besides areas with current speakers of Germanic languages, many regions with previous Germanic speakers or Germanic influence had or still have Germanic toponymic elements, such as places in France, Wallonia, Poland, Northern Portugal, Spain and Northern Italy
Die altgermanischen Toponyme sowie die ungermanischen Toponyme Germaniens This handbook of Old Germanic toponyms is a comprehen-sive collection of Germanic, possibly Germanic and non-Germanic geographical names of Magna Germania and the adjacent provinces The selection of headwords is based on Hermann Reichert´s Lexikon der altgermanischen Namen (LaN)