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List of river name etymologies

This article lists the various etymologies (origins) of the names of rivers around the world.

Africa

Antarctica

Asia

  • Amur: Mongolian "rest"
  • Angara: Buryat angarkhai "the mouth of a wild beast"
  • Aravand-rud: Persian "fast river"
  • Brahmaputra: Sanskrit "son of Brahma"
  • Chao Phraya: Thai เจ้าพระยา "king(s)"
  • Dongjiang: Chinese "east river" (東江)
  • Ganges: Sanskrit Ganga
  • Indus River: Sanskrit Sindhu generically means "river, stream, ocean"
  • Jordan River: Hebrew Yarden, Arabic Urdunn from the root .י.ר.ד‎ / وَرَدَ‎ meaning "to go down".
  • Mekong: Khmer: មេគង្គ Mékôngk. មេ /mee/me/ means mother and គង្គ /kʊəŋkeaʔ/Kong/ means Ganga.
  • Ob: Komi "snow, snowdrift, place of snow"
  • Pearl River: from Chinese 珠江 (Mandarin: Zhu Jiang; Cantonese: Zyü Gong) named after a sandy or stony island in the middle of the river called "Sea Pearl" (now reduced to a bank in the river)
  • Sefid-rud: Persian "White river"
  • Selenge: Mongolian "for swimming"
  • Tigris River: Sumerian "running water"
  • Wang Thong: From Thai วังทอง, "Gold Palace"
  • Chang Jiang: Chinese "long river" (長江), from jiang 江 (Old Chinese: kˁrong), argued to be from earlier Proto-Austroasiatic *krung "river"?
  • Yellow River (Huang He): Chinese "yellow river" (黄河), from he æ²³ (Old Chinese: ɡˁaj), "river"

Europe

  • Aboño: from Celtic *abon- "river": OIr. ab, aub, MW afon, MBret auon, (PIE: *h<sub>2</sub>ep-h<sub>3</sub>on- "river").
  • Argeş: from Greek or maybe Thracian arges = "bright"
  • Avon: from Celtic *abon- "river": OIr. ab, aub, MW afon, MBret auon, (PIE: *h<sub>2</sub>ep-h<sub>3</sub>on- "river").
  • Avonbeg: Irish meaning "small river"
  • Avonmore: Irish meaning "big river"
  • Awbeg: Irish meaning "small river"
  • BistriÅ£a: from Slavic bistra = "fast, quick"
  • Bosna: likely from the Illyrian Bosona = "flowing water". Eponymous of Bosnia.
  • Boyne: from Irish river goddess Boann, "white cow"
  • Cam: from Celtic kambo "bend, cocked", Brythonic cam "crooked"
  • Caraş: from Turkish kara = "black", "dark"
  • Clanrye: Irish meaning "harbour of the king"
  • Clwyd: Welsh meaning "hurdle"
  • Danube: Latin Danuvius, Dacian: Donaris, from Iranian (Scythian or Sarmatian) dānu- "river", of Indo-European origin
  • Dnieper: from Old East Slavic (DÅ­něprÅ­), with further origins disputed
  • Dvina: from Estonian väin, large and slowly flowing river
  • Dobra: from Celtic *dubro "dark": MIr. dobur "black, unclean", MW dwfr "water", MBret. dour (PIE *deub<sup>h</sup>-).
  • Drave: in Latin Dravus, of Thracian or Illyrian origin, probably from PIE *dhreu = "to flow, to fall".
  • Don (Aberdeenshire, Scotland): from Celtic Devona "goddess"
  • Emajõgi: Estonian meaning "mother river"
  • Erne: Irish after the name of the mythical princess, Éirne
  • Foyle: Irish meaning "estuary of the lip"
  • Guadalquivir: from Arabic wadi al-kabir, or "great river"
  • Hayle: from Cornish Heyl "estuary"
  • IalomiÅ£a: Slavic jalov "infertile"
  • Kemijoki: from Old Finnish kemi, "meadowland"
  • Kymijoki: from Old Finnish kymi = "huge river"
  • Lagan: Irish meaning "river of the low-lying district"
  • Llobregat: from Latin Rubricatus or "red river"
  • Mersey: Anglo-Saxon meaning "boundary river"
  • Narva: Veps after "rapid" or "falls"
  • Prahova: Slavic prag = "waterfall" or prah = "dust"
  • Quoile: Irish meaning "the narrow"
  • Rhine: from the archaic German Rhine, which in turn comes from Middle High German: Rin, from the Proto-Indo-European root *reie- ("to flow, run").
  • The Reno in Italy shares the same etymology.
  • Senne: Latin from an old Indo-European root *sn-, meaning “flowing” or “streaming river.”
  • Severn: Latin Sabrina from an Old British river goddess of that name, becoming Hafren in modern Welsh
  • Shannon: Irish Sionann, name of a river goddess, Old Irish Sinann, from sen "old, ancient"
  • Siret: from ancient Thracian Seretos, probably from PIE *sreu = "to flow"
  • Slaney: Irish meaning "river of health"
  • Tay: Celtic river goddess Tawa (Tava, Tatha, "the silent one")
  • Tambre: From Tamaris with the same root that Tamar.
  • Thames: Latin Tamesis from Brythonic meaning "dark river"
  • The Thame and Tamar, and probably the three rivers called Tame, have a similar etymological root
  • Tyne: Brythonic meaning "river"
  • Torne: After a watchtower (tornet in Swedish, torni in Finnish) at the river mouth where the town Tornio is today.
  • Tagus: Old Indo-European *(s)tag- ("to drip", "to flow slowly").
  • Volga: Slavic влага vlaga, волога vologa meaning "wetness", "humidity"; alternatively, Proto-Uralic *valki- "white"; alternatively, Russian velikij "great"
  • Wear: Brythonic meaning "water"

North America

Oceania

Australia

New Zealand

South America

See also

References

Bibliography

  • Bright, William (2004). Native American Place Names of the United States. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press
  • Blažek, Václav, and Ondřej Å efčík. "Oronyms Derived from Water? Mons Abnobae and HaraitÄ«". Historische Sprachforschung [Historical Linguistics] 124 (2011): 239–49. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41553574.
  • Hamp, Eric P. ""Water" in Italic and Keltic". In: Etudes Celtiques, vol. 12, fascicule 2, 1970. pp.&nbsp;547–550. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3406/ecelt.1970.1436 ; www.persee.fr/doc/ecelt_0373-1928_1970_num_12_2_1436