Endonym and exonym

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An endonym /ˈɛndənɪm/ (also known as autonym /ˈɔːtənɪm/) is a common, native name for a group of people, individual person, geographical place, language, or dialect, meaning that it is used inside a particular group or linguistic community to identify or designate themselves, their place of origin, or their language.[1]
An exonym /ˈɛɡzənɪm/ (also known as xenonym /ˈzɛnənɪm/) is an established, non-native name for a group of people, individual person, geographical place,[1] language, or dialect, meaning that it is used primarily outside the particular place inhabited by the group or linguistic community. Exonyms exist not only for historico-geographical reasons but also in consideration of difficulties when pronouncing foreign words,[1] or from non-systematic attempts at transcribing into a different writing system.[2]
For instance, Deutschland is the endonym for the country that is also known by the exonyms Germany and Germania in English and Italian, respectively, Alemania and Allemagne in Spanish and French, respectively, Niemcy in Polish, and Saksa and Saksamaa in Finnish and Estonian, respectively.
Naming and etymology
The terms autonym, endonym, exonym and xenonym are formed by adding specific prefixes to the Greek root word ὄνομα (ónoma) 'name', from Proto-Indo-European *h₃nómn̥.
The prefixes added to these terms are also derived from Greek:
- endonym: ἔνδον (éndon) 'within';
- exonym: ἔξω (éxō) 'outside';
- autonym: αὐτός (autós) 'self'; and
- xenonym: ξένος (xénos) 'foreign'.
The terms autonym and xenonym also have different applications,[3] thus leaving endonym and exonym as the preferred forms.
Marcel Aurousseau, an Australian geographer, first[4] used the term exonym in his work The Rendering of Geographical Names (1957).[5]
Typology
Endonyms and exonyms can be divided in three main categories:[citation needed][6]
- endonyms and exonyms of place names (toponyms),
- endonyms and exonyms of human names (),
- endonyms and exonyms of language names (glossonyms).[7]
Endonyms and exonyms of toponyms
As it pertains to geographical features, the United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names defines:[8]
- Endonym: "Name of a geographical feature in an official or well-established language occurring in that area where the feature is located."
- Exonym: "Name used in a specific language for a geographical feature situated outside the area where that language is spoken, and differing in its form from the name used in an official or well-established language of that area where the geographical feature is located."
For example, India, China,
Endonyms and exonyms of glossonyms
In the case of endonyms and exonyms of language names (glossonyms), Chinese, German, and Dutch, for example, are English-language exonyms for the languages that are endonymously known as Zhōngwén (中文), Deutsch, and Nederlands, respectively.
Exonyms in relation to endonyms
By their relation to endonyms, all exonyms can be divided into three main categories:
- those that are cognate words, diverged only in pronunciation or orthography;
- those that are fully or partially translated (a calque) from the native language;
- those derived from different roots, as in the case of Germany for Deutschland.
Sometimes, a place name may be unable to use many of the letters when
Cognate exonyms
- Londres in Basque, Catalan, Filipino, French, Galician, Portuguese, and Spanish;
- Λονδίνο (pronounced /Lon'ðino/) in Greek;
- Londen in Dutch and Afrikaans;
- Londra in Italian, Maltese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian and Turkish;
- Londër in Albanian;
- Londýn in Czech and Slovak;
- Londyn in Polish;
- Rānana in Māori;
- Lundúnir in Icelandic;
- Londain in Irish;
- Lunnainn in Scottish Gaelic;
- Llundain in Welsh;
- Lontoo in Finnish;
- Luân Đôn in Vietnamese;
- لندن (Landan) in Persian, and Urdu;
- 伦敦 Lúndūn in Chinese.
Translated exonyms
An example of a translated exonym is the name for the Netherlands (Nederland in Dutch) used, respectively, in German (Niederlande), French (Pays-Bas), Italian (Paesi Bassi), Spanish (Países Bajos), Irish (An Ísiltír), Portuguese (Países Baixos) and Romanian (Țările de Jos), all of which mean "Low Countries". However, the endonym Nederland is singular, while all the aforementioned translations except Irish are plural.
Native and borrowed exonyms
Exonyms can also be divided into native and borrowed, e.g., from a third language. For example, the Slovene exonyms Dunaj (Vienna) and Benetke (Venice) are native, but the Avar name of Paris, Париж (Parizh) is borrowed from Russian Париж (Parizh), which comes from Polish Paryż, which comes from Italian Parigi.
A substantial proportion of English-language exonyms for places in continental Europe are borrowed (or adapted) from French; for example:
- Belgrade (Serbian: Београд, romanized: Beograd);
- Bucharest (Romanian: București);
- Kölsch: Kölle);
- Florence (Italian: Firenze);
- Milan (Italian: Milano);
- Munich (German: München / Bavarian: Minga);
- Naples (Italian: Napoli / Neapolitan: Napule);
- Navarre (Spanish: Navarra / Basque: Nafarroa);
- Prague (Czech: Praha);
- Rome (Italian: Roma); and
- Seville (Spanish: Sevilla).
Typical development of exonyms
Many exonyms result from adaptations of an endonym into another language, mediated by differences in phonetics, while others may result from translation of the endonym, or as a reflection of the specific relationship an outsider group has with a local place or geographical feature.[9]
According to
As exonyms develop for places of significance for speakers of the language of the exonym, consequently, many European capitals have English exonyms, for example:
- Athens (Greek: Αθήνα, romanized: Athína);
- Belgrade (Serbian: Београд, romanized: Beograd);
- Bucharest (Romanian: București);
- Brussels (French: Bruxelles, Dutch: Brussel);
- Copenhagen (Danish: København);
- Lisbon (Portuguese: Lisboa);
- Moscow (Russian: Москва, romanized: Moskva);
- Prague (Czech: Praha);
- Rome (Italian: Roma);
- Vienna (German: Wien); and
- Warsaw (Polish: Warszawa).
In contrast, historically less-prominent capitals such as
Some European cities might be considered partial exceptions, in that whilst the spelling is the same across languages, the pronunciation can differ.[11] For example, the city of Paris is spelled the same way in French and English, but the French pronunciation [paʁi] is different from the English pronunciation [ˈpærɪs].
For places considered to be of lesser significance, attempts to reproduce local names have been made in English since the time of the
In earlier times, the name of the first tribe or village encountered became the exonym for the whole people beyond. Thus, the Romans used the tribal names Graecus (Greek) and Germanus (Germanic), the Russians used the village name of
The
- Wallachia, the historic name of Romania inhabited by the Vlachs
- The Slavic term Vlah for "Romanian", dialectally "Italian, Latin"; additionally Vlaška means "Wallachia" in Serbo-Croatian and "Italian woman" in Czech
- Wallonia, the french-speaking region of Belgium
- Anglo-Saxon-dominated England
- Wallis, a mostly French-speaking canton in Switzerland
- Welschland, the German name for the french-speaking Switzerland
- the Polish and Hungarian names for Italy, Włochy and Olaszország respectively
Usage
In avoiding exonyms
During the late 20th century, the use of exonyms often became controversial. Groups often prefer that outsiders avoid exonyms where they have come to be used in a pejorative way. For example, Romani people often prefer that term to exonyms such as Gypsy (from the name of Egypt), and the French term bohémien, bohème (from the name of Bohemia).[12] People may also avoid exonyms for reasons of historical sensitivity, as in the case of German names for Polish and Czech places that, at one time, had been ethnically or politically German (e.g. Danzig/Gdańsk, Auschwitz/Oświęcim and Karlsbad/Karlovy Vary); and Russian names for non-Russian locations that were subsequently renamed or had their spelling changed (e.g. Kiev/Kyiv).[13]
In recent years, geographers have sought to reduce the use of exonyms to avoid this kind of problem. For example, it is now common for Spanish speakers to refer to the Turkish capital as Ankara rather than use the Spanish exonym Angora.[14] Another example, it is now common for Italian speakers to refer to some African states as Mauritius and Seychelles rather than use the Italian exonyms Maurizio and Seicelle.[15] According to the United Nations Statistics Division:
Time has, however, shown that initial ambitious attempts to rapidly decrease the number of exonyms were over-optimistic and not possible to realise in an intended way. The reason would appear to be that many exonyms have become common words in a language and can be seen as part of the language's cultural heritage.
In preference of exonyms
In some situations, the use of exonyms can be preferred. For instance, in multilingual cities such as Brussels, which is known for its linguistic tensions between Dutch- and French-speakers, a neutral name may be preferred so as to not offend anyone. Thus, an exonym such as Brussels in English could be used instead of favoring either one of the local names (Dutch/Flemish: Brussel; French: Bruxelles).
Other difficulties with endonyms have to do with pronunciation, spelling, and word category. The endonym may include sounds and spellings that are highly unfamiliar to speakers of other languages, making appropriate usage difficult if not impossible for an outsider. Over the years, the endonym may have undergone phonetic changes, either in the original language or the borrowing language, thus changing an endonym into an exonym, as in the case of Paris, where the s was formerly pronounced in French. Another example is the endonym for the German city of Cologne, where the Latin original of Colonia has evolved into Köln in German, while the Italian and Spanish exonym Colonia or the Portuguese Colónia closely reflects the Latin original.
In some cases, no standardised spelling is available, either because the language itself is unwritten (even unanalysed) or because there are competing non-standard spellings. Use of a misspelled endonym is perhaps more problematic than the respectful use of an existing exonym.[citation needed] Finally, an endonym may be a plural noun and may not naturally extend itself to adjectival usage in another language like English, which has the propensity to use the adjectives for describing culture and language.[citation needed]
Official preferences
Sometimes the government of a country tries to endorse the use of an endonym instead of traditional exonyms outside the country:
- In 1782, Thai government merged Thon Buri and Phra Nakhon, forming the new capital, Krungthep Mahanakhon. However, outside of Thailand, the capital retained the old name and is still called Bangkok.
- In 1935, Sassanid Empire (224–651), whereas the name Persia is descended from Greek Persis (Περσίς), referring to a single province which is officially known as Fars province.
- In 1949, the government of cat and conjoined twins.
- In 1972, the government of anglicized form of Portuguese Ceilão) changed the name to Sri Lanka, although the name Ceylon was retained as the name for that type of tea.
- In 1985, the government of Francophonecountries, however, the French version has not entered common parlance. For example, in German, the country is known as die Elfenbeinküste, in Spanish as Costa de Marfil and in Italian as Costa d'Avorio.
- In 1989, the names of Burma).
- The Government of India officially changed the English name of Bombay to Mumbai in November 1995,[19] following a trend of renaming of cities and states in India that has occurred since independence.
- The Name of Kyiv).
- The Soviet Republic, has virtually died out; in other languages, exonyms are still much more common than Belarus, for instance in Danish Hviderusland, Dutch Wit-Rusland, Estonian Valgevene, Faroese Hvítarussland, Finnish Valko-Venäjä, German Weißrussland, Greek Lefkorosía (Λευκορωσία), Hungarian Fehéroroszország, Icelandic Hvíta-Rússland, Swedish Vitryssland, Turkish Beyaz Rusya, Chinese Bái'èluósī (白俄罗斯), Arabic rusia albayda' (روسيا البيضاء) (all literally 'White Russia'), or French Biélorussie, Italian Bielorussia, Portuguese Bielorrússia, Spanish Bielorrusia, and Serbian Belorusija (Белорусија).
- The government of Georgia has been working to have the country renamed from the Russian-derived exonym of Gruzia in foreign languages to Georgia. Most countries have adopted this change, except for Lithuania, which adopted Sakartvelas (a Lithuanianised version of the country's endonym). As a response, Georgia changed the name of Lithuania in Georgian from the Russian-derived Lit’va (ლიტვა) to the endonym Liet’uva (ლიეტუვა). Ukrainian politicians have also suggested that Ukraine change the Ukrainian name of Georgia from Hruzia (Грузія) to Sakartvelo (Сакартвело).
- In 2006, the South Korean national government officially changed the Chinese name of its capital, Seoul, from the exonym 漢城/汉城 (Hànchéng) derived from the Joseon era Hanja name (Korean: 한성; Hanja: 漢城; RR: Hanseong) to Shǒu'ěr (首爾/首尔). This use has now been made official within China.
- In December 2021, a circular was issued by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Turkey ordering the use of Türkiye (also rendered Turkiye in English) instead of exonyms in official communications, no matter the language.[20][21]
Hanyu Pinyin
Following the 1979 declaration of
In the case of Beijing, the adoption of the exonym by media outlets quickly gave rise to a hyperforeignised pronunciation, with the result that many English speakers actualize the j in Beijing as /ʒ/.[23] One exception of Pinyin standardization in mainland China is the spelling of the province Shaanxi, which is the mixed Gwoyeu Romatzyh–Pinyin spelling of the province. That is because if Pinyin were used to spell the province, it would be indistinguishable from its neighboring province Shanxi, where the pronunciations of the two provinces only differ by tones, which are usually not written down when used in English.
In Taiwan, however, the standardization of Hanyu Pinyin has only seen mixed results. In Taipei, most (but not all) street and district names shifted to Hanyu Pinyin. For example, the Sinyi District is now spelled Xinyi. However, districts like Tamsui and even Taipei itself are not spelled according to Hanyu Pinyin spelling rules. As a matter of fact, most names of Taiwanese cities are still spelled using Chinese postal romanization, including Taipei, Taichung, Taitung, Keelung, and Kaohsiung.
During the 1980s, the Singapore Government encouraged the use of Hanyu Pinyin spelling for place names, especially those with Teochew, Hokkien or Cantonese names, as part of the Speak Mandarin Campaign to promote Mandarin and discourage the use of dialects. For example, the area of Nee Soon, named after Teochew-Peranakan businessman Lim Nee Soon (Hanyu Pinyin: Lín Yìshùn) became Yishun and the neighbourhood schools and places established following the change used the Hanyu Pinyin spelling. In contrast, Hougang is the Hanyu Pinyin spelling but the Hokkien pronunciation au-kang is most commonly used.[24] The changes to Hanyu Pinyin were not only financially costly but were unpopular with the locals, who opined that the Hanyu Pinyin versions were too difficult for non-Chinese or non-Mandarin speakers to pronounce. The government eventually stopped the changes by the 1990s, which has led to some place names within a locality having differing spellings. For example, Nee Soon Road and the Singapore Armed Forces base Nee Soon Camp are both located in Yishun but retained the old spelling.[25]
Exonyms as pejoratives
This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2020) |
Matisoff wrote, "A group's autonym is often egocentric, equating the name of the people with 'mankind in general,' or the name of the language with 'human speech'."[10]: 5
In Basque, the term erdara/erdera is used for speakers of any language other than Basque (usually Spanish or French).
Many millennia earlier, the Greeks thought that all non-Greeks were uncultured and so called them "
Slavic people
Exonyms often describe others as "foreign-speaking", "non-speaking", or "nonsense-speaking". One example is the
One of the more prominent theories regarding the origin of the term "
Native Americans
The most common names of several
Various Native-American autonyms are sometimes explained to English readers as having literal translations of "original people" or "normal people", with implicit contrast to other first nations as not original or not normal.[10]: 5
Confusion with renaming
![]() | This section possibly contains original research. (December 2022) |
In East Asia
Although the pronunciation for several names of Chinese cities such as
As the Mandarin pronunciation does not perfectly map to an
Likewise, many Korean cities like Busan and Incheon (formerly "Pusan" and "Inch'ŏn" respectively) also underwent changes in spelling due to changes in romanization, even though the Korean pronunciations have largely stayed the same.
In Eurasia
Exonyms and endonyms must not be confused with the results of geographical renaming as in the case of Saint Petersburg, which became Petrograd (Петроград) in 1914, Leningrad (Ленинград) in 1924, and again Saint Petersburg (Санкт-Петербург, Sankt-Peterbúrg) in 1991. In this case, although Saint Petersburg has a Dutch etymology, it was never a Dutch exonym for the city between 1914 and 1991, just as Nieuw Amsterdam, the Dutch name of New York City until 1664, is not its Dutch exonym.
Old place names that have become outdated after renaming may afterward still be used as
Likewise,
In India
Following independence from the UK in 1947, many regions and cities have been renamed in accordance with local languages, or to change the English spelling to more closely match the indigenous local name. The name
Lists of exonyms
- Latin exonyms
- List of English exonyms
- List of German exonyms
- German names for Central European towns
- German exonyms for places in Belgium
- German exonyms for places in Croatia
- German exonyms for places in Denmark
- German exonyms for places in Estonia
- German exonyms for places in Hungary
- German exonyms for places in Latvia
- German exonyms for places in Slovakia
- German exonyms for places in Switzerland
- List of European exonyms
- Names of European cities in different languages
- Finnish exonyms
- Greek exonyms
- Italian exonyms
- Portuguese exonyms
- Icelandic exonyms
- Russian exonyms
- Slavic toponyms for Greek places
- Welsh names for other places in Britain and Ireland
- African/Asian/Middle-Eastern/Eurasian exonyms
- Arabic exonyms
- Azerbaijani exonyms
- Armenian exonyms
- Chinese exonyms
- Japanese exonyms
- Vietnamese exonyms
See also
Other lists
- List of countries and dependencies and their capitals in native languages
- List of adjectival and demonymic forms of place names
- List of language names
- List of alternative country names
- List of country names in various languages
- List of Latin place names in Europe
- List of European regions with alternative names
- List of European rivers with alternative names
- List of traditional Greek place names
- List of Coptic placenames
- Place names in Irish
- Names of places in Finland in Finnish and in Swedish
- List of renamed Indian cities and states
References
Citations
- ^ a b c "Exonym and Endonym". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 2022-11-16.
- ^ Ormeling, Ferjan. "Exonyms in Cartography" (PDF). United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
- ^ Room 1996, p. 14.
- ISBN 9783110148794. (TOC)
- ^ Aurousseau, Marcel (1957). The Rendering of Geographical Names. London: Hutchinson university library. p. 17.
- ISBN 978-92-3-101944-9.
- ^ Edelman, Loulou. 2009. "What's in a Name? Classification of proper names by language". Pp. 141–53 in Linguistic landscape: expanding the scenery, edited by E. Shohamy and D. Gorter. London: Routledge. Goh, CL.:
"The names of monarchs, popes, and non-contemporary authors as well as place names are commonly translated. Foreign names for geographic proper names are called exonyms. Fourment-Berni Canani (1994) discusses the (im)possibility of translating proper names. He gives examples of the place names Venice and London. The Italian city Venezia has been renamed Venice in English and Venise in French. A city in the American state California is also called Venice, but this name is not changed into Venezia in Italian and Venise in French. Similarly, the English city Londonhas been renamed Londres in French and Londra in Italian. However, the Canadian city called London is not translated into French and Italian in this way. Thus, as Fourment-Berni Canani concludes, a place name can be translated if the place, as a unique referent, has already been renamed in the target language."
- ISSN 2536-1732..
- ^ Jordan, Peter (3–7 May 2021). Exonyms as part of the cultural heritage (Provisional agenda item 13 – submission by Austria). New York: United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names, Second session.
- ^ OCLC 15093829.
- ^ ""UNGEGN-ICA webcourse on Toponymy"". United Nations Statistics Division. Archived from the original on 11 March 2024.
- ^ Challa, Janaki. "Why Being 'Gypped' Hurts The Roma More Than It Hurts You". NPR. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
"Hancock tells me the word "gypsy" itself is an "exonym" – a term imposed upon an ethnic group by outsiders. When the Roma people moved westward from India towards the European continent, they were mistaken to be Egyptian because of their features and dark skin. We see the same phenomenon across several languages, not only English. Victor Hugo, in his epic Hunchback of Notre Dame, noted that the Medieval French term for the Roma was egyptiens. In Spanish, the word for gypsy is "gitano," which comes from the word egipcio, meaning Egyptian – in Romanian: tigan, in Bulgarian: tsiganin, in Turkish: cingene – all of which are variations of slang words for "Egyptian" in those languages."
- ^ Van der Meulen, Martin (19 April 2022). "Why I Will Never Again Refer to the Ukrainian Capital City as Kiev". The Low Countries. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
- ^ Luxán, Marga Azcárate; Tagle, Bárbara Alonso. "EXONYMS IN SPANISH Criteria and usage in cartography" (PDF). NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC INSTITUTE OF SPAIN (IGN). Retrieved 18 September 2023.
- ^ Sandro Toniolo, I perché e i nomi della geografia, Istituto Geografico Militare, Florence 2005, p. 88–89, n. 170-171.
- ^ Press, Stanford University. "Start reading The Discovery of Iran". sup.org. Retrieved 2024-03-11.
- ^ a b c "Ninth United Nations Conference on the Standardization of Geographical Names" (PDF). United Nations Statistics Division. Retrieved 11 March 2024.
- ^ "Myanmar, Burma and why the different names matter". Associated Press. 2021-02-02. Retrieved 2024-03-11.
- ISSN 1091-2339. Retrieved 2024-03-11.
- ^ "Turkiye – The latest news from TRT World". Turkiye – The latest news from TRT World. Retrieved 2022-01-02.
- ^ "Why Turkey is now 'Turkiye', and why that matters". Why Turkey is now 'Turkiye', and why that matters. Archived from the original on 2023-02-09. Retrieved 2022-01-02.
- OCLC 52095159.
- OCLC 746747262.
- ISBN 9789814408356.
- ^ Yeh, Yun-Tsui. (2013) "Erased Place Names" and Nation-building: A Case Study of Singaporean Toponyms". Sociology.
- ISBN 9780719034398.
- ^ d'Errico, Peter (2005). "Native American Indian Studies – A Note on Names". University of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2020-10-07.
- ^ Sapir, Edward (1992). "Southern Paiute Dictionary". In Bright, William (ed.). The Collected Works of Edward Sapir. Berlin: Mouton deGruyter.
- ^ Cordell, Linda; McBrinn, Maxine (2012). Archaeology of the Southwest (3 ed.).
- ^ "Puebloan Culture". University of Northern Colorado. Archived from the original on 2010-07-09.
- ^ "The Names of Kōnstantinoúpolis". Dünden bugüne İstanbul ansiklopedisi. 5. Ciltli. 1994.
- ^ Bag, Ahana (October 19, 2021). "It's time to end the 'Madrasi' stereotype". Madras Courier. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
General and cited sources
- Jordan, Peter, Hubert Bergmann, Caroline Burgess, and Catherine Cheetham, eds. 2010 & 2011. "Trends in Exonym Use." Proceedings of the 10th UNGEGN Working Group on Exonyms Meeting. Tainach (28–30 April 2010). Hamburg (2011). Name & Place 1.
- Jordan, Peter, Milan Orožen Adamič, and Paul Woodman, eds. 2007. "Exonyms and the International Standardisation of Geographical Names." Approaches towards the Resolution of an Apparent Contradiction. Wien and Berlin. Wiener Osteuropastudien 24.
- Room, Adrian (1996). An Alphabetical Guide to the Language of Name Studies. Lanham and London: The Scarecrow Press. p. 14. ISBN 9780810831698.
External links
- 2006 UN document discussing exonyms (PDF)
- Jacek Wesołowski's Place Names in Europe, featuring endonyms and exonyms for many cities (archived 23 August 2000)
- "Does Juliet's Rose, by Any Other Name, Smell as Sweet?" by Verónica Albin.
- Looking up in exonym database
- European geographical names infrastructure and services on EuroGeoNames (archived 15 January 2009)
- UN document describing EuroGeoNames (PDF)
- World map of country endonyms