Quaint/cute British place names


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"Foxshire on Moss" is weird, because a shire is a largeish area. It's usually only towns which are named after their proximity to a river - "Foxton on Moss", frex.
 

mhacdebhandia said:
"Foxshire on Moss" is weird, because a shire is a largeish area. It's usually only towns which are named after their proximity to a river - "Foxton on Moss", frex.

Yeah, basically a shire is a type of county (i.e. all shires are counties, but not all counties are shires). So as mhacdebhandia says, you wouldn't have "xxxshire on xxx".

And in terms of what english counties are, they are mostly like US counties, but I believe a bit bigger (we think of them more in the way that Americans think of states). It's much more a regional identity, rather than the local town and its surroundings.

I found this link giving details of UK counties.

http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~jimella/counties.htm
 




A couple of miles from me are the following places:

*) Pity Me (originally from the Norman French Petit Mer for the small lake)

*) No Place (I've no idea how this name came about!)

Cheers,
Liam
 

Woas said:
I always liked Upper and Lower Slaughter.

My town in Connecticut has streets named either Upper & Lower Butcher or Middle & Lower Butcher. Of course, a lot of New England names are from England - I grew up in a town name Cromwell.
 



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