Indigenous Common Names and Toponyms in Southern Africa

The primary process of toponymic formation by the earliest indigenous inhabitants of the African sub-continent, the Bushmen and Khoikhoi, was evolutionary. Due to their primary onomastic function, descriptions or common names that identified and referred to geographical features gradually lost thei...

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Main Author: Peter E. Raper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2017-10-01
Series:Names
Online Access:http://ans-names.pitt.edu/ans/article/view/2130
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author Peter E. Raper
author_facet Peter E. Raper
author_sort Peter E. Raper
collection DOAJ
description The primary process of toponymic formation by the earliest indigenous inhabitants of the African sub-continent, the Bushmen and Khoikhoi, was evolutionary. Due to their primary onomastic function, descriptions or common names that identified and referred to geographical features gradually lost their descriptive or lexical semantic relevance and assumed the status of proper names. Physical and cultural contact, including language contact, took place between these indigenous groups and incoming Bantu and European peoples over the past 2000 years. Some indigenous toponyms were adopted by the incoming peoples, but adapted to the phonological and later orthographic systems of the receiver languages; some names were translated, while some were replaced by other names. The present article investigates the phonological and semantic processes of the adaptation of Bushman toponyms by Bantu and European peoples, including folk etymological and associative reinterpretation, and identifies fossilized and disguised Bushman common names embedded in the toponyms.
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spelling doaj.art-775dd52c6f40423da794783aa6be31a32022-12-22T01:31:00ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghNames0027-77381756-22792017-10-0165410.1080/00277738.2017.1369742Indigenous Common Names and Toponyms in Southern AfricaPeter E. Raper The primary process of toponymic formation by the earliest indigenous inhabitants of the African sub-continent, the Bushmen and Khoikhoi, was evolutionary. Due to their primary onomastic function, descriptions or common names that identified and referred to geographical features gradually lost their descriptive or lexical semantic relevance and assumed the status of proper names. Physical and cultural contact, including language contact, took place between these indigenous groups and incoming Bantu and European peoples over the past 2000 years. Some indigenous toponyms were adopted by the incoming peoples, but adapted to the phonological and later orthographic systems of the receiver languages; some names were translated, while some were replaced by other names. The present article investigates the phonological and semantic processes of the adaptation of Bushman toponyms by Bantu and European peoples, including folk etymological and associative reinterpretation, and identifies fossilized and disguised Bushman common names embedded in the toponyms. http://ans-names.pitt.edu/ans/article/view/2130
spellingShingle Peter E. Raper
Indigenous Common Names and Toponyms in Southern Africa
Names
title Indigenous Common Names and Toponyms in Southern Africa
title_full Indigenous Common Names and Toponyms in Southern Africa
title_fullStr Indigenous Common Names and Toponyms in Southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous Common Names and Toponyms in Southern Africa
title_short Indigenous Common Names and Toponyms in Southern Africa
title_sort indigenous common names and toponyms in southern africa
url http://ans-names.pitt.edu/ans/article/view/2130
work_keys_str_mv AT petereraper indigenouscommonnamesandtoponymsinsouthernafrica