Gorge

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gorge is a French and English toponym for a narrow valley and also a place name. Naturally, it is also widely used as a component in the names of bridges and dams or lakes, as well as in those of nature reserves and traffic routes (which can also be found in the list given here).

Name customer

Gorge stands for German gorge , gorge , but also Tobel and other Engtalformen. In British English , it also stands for American canyon , which in geological usage is reserved for a specific notch valley shape. In French, it is usually found in the plural form Gorges in the sense of “ rapids ”, “bottleneck”, “gorge system”.

The second main meaning, however, is “ throat ”.

It can already be found in Middle English , as a loan word from Old French , and comes from the Latin gurga , which is also the basis for the German words "Gurgel" and "gurgeln" (cf. Italian gorgo " Strudel ", " Wirbel "; gorgoliare " gargle "," boil "," bubble "). The root form is probably Latin gurges "water vortex" (English whirlpool ), "throat" (English abyss ). German stands for “Schlund” as a Germanic equivalent in these two meanings: pharynx , throat (anatomy) and throat (geology) .

distribution

Gorge (s) is common in France and Switzerland, in England, the USA and other English-speaking countries.

List of narrow valleys

France

such as:

Switzerland

England

New Zealand

Australia

- Western Australia

- Northern Territory

- Queensland

United States

Other states

Well-known exonyms

Known foreign language names:

  • Three Gorges Dam Project for Chinese   三峽 大壩  /  三峡 大坝 , Pinyin Sānxiá Dàbà , German " Three Gorges Dam " on the Yangtze River in the People's Republic of China

Individual evidence

  1. Entry Gorge . In: American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language - Online.