East
of Lancashire, England lies Pendle Hill, known for its historical
association with witch trials, scientific discoveries about air
pressure, and religious visions that led to the founding of the Quaker
movement. It is also known for having a tautological name. A
tautological name has two parts that are redundant, or synonymous.
Tautological place names usually come about when more than one language
goes into the name. Some California examples that mix Spanish and
English are Laguna Lake (Lake Lake) and Lake Lagunita (Lake Little
Lake). The Pendle in Pendle Hill is derived from Pen-hyll, a combination
of the Cumbric word for hill and the Old English word for hill. So
Pendle Hill is really Hill Hill Hill. Here are 11 other redundant place
names:
1. Lake Tahoe (Lake Lake)
This scenic body of water on the Nevada/California border gets its name from a loose pronunciation of
dá’aw, a word from the Native American language Washo that means lake.
2. La Brea Tar Pits (The Tar Tar Pits)
The animal bones displayed at this California attraction were preserved in
la brea, Spanish for the tar.
3. Milky Way Galaxy (Milky Way Milky)
The general astronomical term "galaxy" comes from the word the
ancient Greeks used to describe the band of light they could see in the
night sky,
galaxias or milky.
4. Minnehaha Falls (Waterfall Falls)
The name for this Minnesota waterfall does not, as the legend has it,
mean "laughing water." It comes from the Dakota word for waterfall.
5. Sahara Desert (Deserts Desert)
The name for this giant expanse of North Africa comes from
çaḥrā, the Arabic word for deserts.
6. El Camino Way (The Way Way)
There's a street in Palo Alto, CA called El Camino Way, or The Way
Way. If you drive down it in your Chevy El Camino you will be driving
your way down The Way Way in The Way.
7. Avenue Road
The city of Toronto can't claim the foreign language excuse for this tautological street name.
8. Street Road
Nor can this name for Pennsylvania Route 132 be blamed on foreign language issues.
9. Mississippi River (Big River River)
Our favorite spelling word is derived from an Algonquian word for big river.
10. The Rock of Gibraltar (The Rock of The Rock of Tariq)
Gibraltar came from the Arabic
Jabal Tariq, or The Rock of
Tariq, named for Tariq ibn Ziyad, the 8th century Muslim commander who
conquered Spain after assembling his troops at Gibraltar.
11. East Timor (East East)
Whether you say East Timor or Timor Leste, it still means East East. Timor comes from the Indonesian/Malay
timur,
for east. One could argue that the name isn't really tautological,
since Timor is the name for the easternmost island in a chain of
islands, and East Timor is the eastern half of that island. It's the
easternmost part of the easternmost island. Not the same easternmosts!
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