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A toponomastic contribution to the linguistic prehistory of the British Isles

Coates, Richard

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Abstract

It is well known that some of the major island-names of the archipelago consisting politically of the Republic of Ireland, the United Kingdom, and the UK Crown Dependencies are etymologically obscure. In this paper, I present and cautiously analyse a small set of those which remain unexplained or uncertainly explained. It is timely to do this, since in the disciplines of archaeology and genetics there is an emerging consensus that after the last Ice Age the islands were repopulated mainly by people from a refuge on the Iberian peninsula. This opinion is at least superficially compatible with Theo Vennemann’s Semitidic and Vasconic hypotheses (e.g. Vennemann 1995), i.e. that languages (a) of the Afroasiatic family, and (b) ancestral to Basque, are important contributors to the lexical and onomastic stock of certain European languages. The unexplained or ill-explained island names form a small set, but large enough to make it worthwhile to attempt an analysis of their collective linguistic heritage, and therefore to give – or fail to give – preliminary support to a particular hypothesis about their origin.

Citation

Coates, R. (2012). A toponomastic contribution to the linguistic prehistory of the British Isles. Nomina, 35, 49-102

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2012
Deposit Date Oct 8, 2015
Publicly Available Date Feb 22, 2016
Journal Nomina
Print ISSN 0141-6340
Publisher Society for Name Studies in Britain and Ireland
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 35
Pages 49-102
Keywords linguistics, Britain
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/952266
Publisher URL http://www.snsbi.org.uk/Nomina.html

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