Without literary traditions, rural folk share elaborate cognitive maps with others through the use of toponyms that give geographic orientations. |
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The project relied on teamwork, the collection of toponyms, the drawing of sketch maps, and the interpretation of air photos. |
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The principal legacy left behind in those territories from which the language of the Britons were displaced is that of toponyms. |
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Without literary traditions, they relied on mental maps for describing places and fixed specific locations using toponyms and oral descriptions. |
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Indeed, toponyms often embed the meaning of that place in their etymology. |
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The chapter, which takes up fewer than 30 pages, contains nearly 200 toponyms of nations, counties, towns, streets, rivers, buildings, and other geographical features. |
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The Chairperson also commented on cooperation with Mexico in the production of small-scale maps of North America using official toponyms. |
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In the 18th century, the use of toponyms or street names became more and more common. |
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Access the database of toponyms, or geographical names, that are used on official, Government of Canada maps. |
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The report gave details on the institutional and linguistic context, legal status and sources of Belgian toponyms. |
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These milestones bear date, patron names and toponyms related to the region, and are thus of documentary importance. |
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It was noted that the first volume of a four-volume encyclopedia of historical toponyms had been published. |
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In this report, in contrast with the previous one, toponyms are involved only indirectly. |
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The paper contains a list of toponyms in the national territory for sections I to VIII of the border between Chile and Argentina. |
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In total, there were more than 145,000 toponyms from three scales of map products stored in the database. |
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In most cases, look for French toponyms that may be anglicized, but the reverse is also possible, although less frequent. |
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The sources are complementary in identifying and locating toponyms, still a painstaking task, but immensely valuable for any study of settlement patterns. |
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First, identification of Turkish toponyms with those in the Venetian documents permits us to locate all the toponyms found in the Venetian sources. |
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However the toponyms of inhabited places have been updated on the maps. |
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It may be related to other European and Mediterranean toponyms such as Alpes, Albania and Liban. |
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Inflected forms of the articles are also often found in surnames and toponyms. |
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The following is a position piece concerning the role and placement of toponyms as mappable cultural capital. |
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British toponyms are another type of evidence, recorded in Latinised forms by Ptolemy's Geography. |
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But it wasn't only the evocative toponyms or the menace of the place that I found fascinating, it was the sense that the landscape of Morecambe Bay seemed so rich with stories, all of them held at a tantalising distance. |
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Aboriginal place names, also known as toponyms, are increasingly being recognized as one of the region's most important types of historical information. |
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Theosophic toponyms in England include Woodway House, Wansdyke, Wednesbury and Thundersley. |
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The author often travelled and gives us hundreds of toponyms and descriptions of the physical environment from the wide area situated between the current provinces of Savannakhet, Champassak and Attapeu. |
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The goal of this workshop is on the one hand to clarify socio-economic, juridical, and administrative terminology and on the other to identify toponyms and patronyms. |
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Even today, toponyms are sometimes changed. |
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In addition, toponyms in most of the files will also be updated. |
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The toponymic hierarchy which developed in this small island microtoponymic study exposes how language as toponyms and toponyms as language can be managed. |
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The use of the older inflected form den in the dative or accusative as well as use of 'der' in the dative are restricted to numerous set phrases, surnames and toponyms. |
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Those who argue against the theory of a Brittonic substratum and heavy influence point out that many toponyms have no semantic continuation from the Brittonic language. |
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