The coining of toponyms involves various processes. The most common of these involve such factors as description or association (e.g. Coldwater Creek, Rocky Plain, Round Mountain, Powerline Creek, Shark Bay); the naming of a feature after someone or something (e.g. Mt Kosciuszko, Adelaide, Endeavour River, Collaroy etc.); or the commemoration of an event or occasion (e.g. Cape Tribulation, Agincourt Reefs, Whitsunday Islands) (See Tent & Blair, 2011). In a Placenames Australia article (Tent, 2017), I enumerated a number of other linguistic processes that are used in the coining of new toponyms. These include: copying (more commonly referred to as 'borrowing') of words, names or toponyms from other languages; affixation (the addition of one ...
This paper identifies the historical-cultural processes represented by the published etymologies of ...
In a recent paper on transparency versus opacity in Australian Aboriginal place names, linguist Mich...
Toponymy answers in part the conference question “What lies behind the idea, common in indigenous co...
This paper uses the concept of pristine place-naming first put forward by Ross (1958: 333) to analys...
Insular Toponymies: Place-naming on Norfolk Island, South Pacific and Dudley Peninsula, Kangaroo Isl...
This paper analyses data on two aspects of unofficial place-naming or folk toponymy on the Dudley Pe...
The author presentes here the specific character of Australian onoma stics from the semantic ...
The entire Australian continent was once covered with networks of Indigenous placenames. These names...
In this issue: Skeletons in the toponymic cupboard – 1 • Brisbane city street names – 3 • Recent e...
The entire Australian continent was once covered with networks of Indigenous placenames. These names...
One of the main obstacles to having a meaningful discussion on, or analysis of, placenaming practice...
Toponyms denote or identify human habitation sites (cities, towns, villages etc.), natural geograph...
I have always been intrigued with the toponymic anomaly of the name of the Australian state of New S...
Aboriginal approaches to the naming of places across Australia differ radically from the official in...
What flows from ngaka-rna — How naming books spread a Dieri word Coining a new name from a word take...
This paper identifies the historical-cultural processes represented by the published etymologies of ...
In a recent paper on transparency versus opacity in Australian Aboriginal place names, linguist Mich...
Toponymy answers in part the conference question “What lies behind the idea, common in indigenous co...
This paper uses the concept of pristine place-naming first put forward by Ross (1958: 333) to analys...
Insular Toponymies: Place-naming on Norfolk Island, South Pacific and Dudley Peninsula, Kangaroo Isl...
This paper analyses data on two aspects of unofficial place-naming or folk toponymy on the Dudley Pe...
The author presentes here the specific character of Australian onoma stics from the semantic ...
The entire Australian continent was once covered with networks of Indigenous placenames. These names...
In this issue: Skeletons in the toponymic cupboard – 1 • Brisbane city street names – 3 • Recent e...
The entire Australian continent was once covered with networks of Indigenous placenames. These names...
One of the main obstacles to having a meaningful discussion on, or analysis of, placenaming practice...
Toponyms denote or identify human habitation sites (cities, towns, villages etc.), natural geograph...
I have always been intrigued with the toponymic anomaly of the name of the Australian state of New S...
Aboriginal approaches to the naming of places across Australia differ radically from the official in...
What flows from ngaka-rna — How naming books spread a Dieri word Coining a new name from a word take...
This paper identifies the historical-cultural processes represented by the published etymologies of ...
In a recent paper on transparency versus opacity in Australian Aboriginal place names, linguist Mich...
Toponymy answers in part the conference question “What lies behind the idea, common in indigenous co...