Is toponymy necessary?
Like other areas of linguistic study, toponymy as a domain of analysis does not present itself as being overly reflective of its own assumptions. I ask whether a sub-category or sub-analysis dedicated to toponymy is required at all if we analyse toponyms, landscape terms, and geographical names within the scope of general linguistic analysis (lexical semantics, morphosyntax, and phonology). Or put succinctly: Is toponymy necessary? Data from a longitudinal study of Norfolk Island and Kangaroo Island toponymy indicate there are no marked aberrancies in either sets of data which cannot be accounted for by either more general Norf’k (the Norfolk Island language) or English rules. I conclude by suggesting future studies in landscape terminology should be more mindful of the requirements of the linguistic study of toponymy, especially within lexical, morphosyntactic, and phonological concerns, rather than just within the semantic domain.
References (9)
Clark, I.D., L. Hercus & L. Kostanski (eds.). 2014. Indigenous and minority place names: Australian and international perspectives, Canberra: ANU E-Press.
Coates, R.A. 2006. Properhood. Language 82(4). 356–382.
Coates, R.A. 2011. Some consequences and critiques of The Pragmatic Theory of Properhood. Onoma 411. 27–44.
Felecan, D. 2013. Mediated naming: The case of unconventional anthroponyms (UA). Names 61(4). 219–229.
Huber, J. 2013, Landscape in East Timor Papuan, Language Sciences 411. 175–196.
Le Page, R.B. 1998. Ivory towers: Memoirs of a Pidgin fancier. Kingston, Jamaica: Society for Caribbean Linguistics.
Turk, A & D. Stea. 2014. David Mark’s contribution to ethnophysiography research. International Journal of Geographical Information Science 28(6). 1246–1263.
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Ursini, Francesco-Alessio & Yue Sara Zhang
2023.
Place and place names: a unified model.
Frontiers in Psychology 14
Ursini, Francesco-Alessio & Haiping Long
2020.
Urbanonyms and Their Linguistic Properties in Italian.
Names ► pp. 1 ff.
Villette, Julia & Ross S. Purves
2020.
From Microtoponyms to Landscape Using Semantics, Location, and Topography: The Case of Wald, Holz, Riet, and Moos in St. Gallen, Switzerland.
The Professional Geographer 72:1
► pp. 109 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 19 july 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.