The world's silliest place names

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 4,1 тыс.

  • @RobWords
    @RobWords  Год назад +124

    Before jetting off to France to enjoy the delights of Anus, first go to nordvpn.com/robwords to get the two year plan with an exclusive deal PLUS 1 bonus month on top. It’s risk free with NordVPN’s 30 day money back guarantee!

    • @roseashkiiii4361
      @roseashkiiii4361 Год назад +6

      There's also condom and brest 😂

    • @MuZeSiCk77
      @MuZeSiCk77 Год назад +2

      Never heard of Sexbeerum? It's in Frysland i believe.

    • @christiansebastianlauritse2404
      @christiansebastianlauritse2404 Год назад +5

      Å comes last in the alphabet, så Aa would still be first on the list. ;)

    • @GiggleBytes2011
      @GiggleBytes2011 Год назад +6

      Fan y Big is correctly pronounced phonetically as 'VAN ER BE-EG' in Welsh, alas not so funny now Rob 😁

    • @GopherBaroque61
      @GopherBaroque61 Год назад +10

      Hi Rob, here in the good ol' USA, we pronounce the "y" in Zzyzx with a short 'i' sound (as in fit), not a long 'i' sound (as in fight). It sound more like "Zizzicks"... sort of like Physics with a "Z" instead of a "Ph".

  • @_volder
    @_volder Год назад +1453

    Not only does Pennsylvania have both an Intercourse and a Blue Ball, but they're only about 8 miles apart, so it's literally possible to be heading toward Intercourse, make a wrong turn, and end up at Blue Ball.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +342

      Glorious

    • @macerra4401
      @macerra4401 Год назад +98

      I'm here to represent all 302 residents of beautiful Hop Bottom, Pennsylvania

    • @coverstreet2009
      @coverstreet2009 Год назад

      I live a stone's throw from Blue Ball. If you can't get to Intercourse and you're traveling alone, you could always go to Bird-in-Hand. But if you have a companion, you could stop by Fertility, head towards Intercourse, then continue on to Paradise.

    • @rightasrainevelynj.willbur797
      @rightasrainevelynj.willbur797 Год назад +82

      It is also true that Paradise pennsylvania is about the same distance from Intercourse, in the other direction.

    • @frankwales
      @frankwales Год назад +87

      @@rightasrainevelynj.willbur797 Does that mean the true journey should be from Blue Ball through Intercourse to Paradise?

  • @thecosplaycrafter8017
    @thecosplaycrafter8017 Год назад +849

    "... than if you're in Clit, Romania, for example, assuming you've been able to find the place." Best line in the whole video by far.

    • @TheFirstGhirn
      @TheFirstGhirn Год назад +77

      Perhaps they should sister city with Climax Michigan.

    • @vegxnvxmpire
      @vegxnvxmpire Год назад +12

      i nearly choked on my ice cream when he said that😭

    • @Neil070
      @Neil070 Год назад +73

      ​@@TheFirstGhirnIf you can't find Clit, you'll never reach Climax

    • @auldfouter8661
      @auldfouter8661 Год назад

      Funny that clit is a normal word in Scots meaning the toe on a cow's foot - hence the cause of lameness in cattle called clit-ill.

    • @nightwishlover8913
      @nightwishlover8913 Год назад +25

      I was going to Like that comment, but it had 69 likes already...

  • @rontocknell5400
    @rontocknell5400 Год назад +225

    I became aware of two odd place names in Illinois USA when a friend sent me a cutting from a small local newspaper in Oblong, a village in Crawford County, Illinois. The short piece (possibly for comedic effect) announced the marriage of a local man and his fiancée from the McClean County town of Normal, also in Illinois. The headline ran "OBLONG MAN MARRIES NORMAL WOMAN". You don't get headlines like that every day (or maybe they do in Normal and Oblong).

    • @darylcheshire1618
      @darylcheshire1618 Год назад +15

      Speaking of comedic headlines, there was this football player called Royce Hart, when he lost a tribunal case, the headline was Tribunal Rolls Royce. Even my mum laughed at that.

    • @robinchesterfield42
      @robinchesterfield42 Год назад +10

      There's also the headline: 'RV CRASHES INTO BORING TAVERN" because of Boring, Oregon (sister city of Dull and Bland). Which I guess makes it not so boring anymore.

    • @jimbim4405
      @jimbim4405 5 месяцев назад +1

      hilarious!!

    • @Loranzojose2000
      @Loranzojose2000 3 месяца назад +3

      It will take you 42 hrs to drive from blue ball through intercourse to Climax, Oregon. You’ll be tired.

  • @jacobmarsh7833
    @jacobmarsh7833 10 месяцев назад +145

    In Alaska, there are about four villages/towns called Moose Pass (only one is an official town). Besides there being about four of them, it's not too funny, but when you are 10 years old and you drive past a gas station with a big sign that says “Moose Pass Gas” it suddenly becomes hilarious.

    • @KenFullman
      @KenFullman 3 месяца назад +3

      I'd be inclined to buy the neigbouring properties, then put a sign saying "YES" just before it, then another saying "In case you were wondering" just after it.

  • @edderiofer
    @edderiofer Год назад +246

    In Hong Kong, there is an odd little street called Rednaxela Terrace. Legend has it that during colonial times, the street was once owned by a Mr Alexander and was originally called Alexander Terrace, but during a street census, the census taker (who spoke Chinese) wrote the letters in "Alexander" from right to left (as would have been standard in Chinese at the time), and the name stuck. This is the only example I can find of a street name being reversed due to a clerical error.

    • @moonhunter9993
      @moonhunter9993 Год назад +7

      awesome

    • @KayElayempea
      @KayElayempea 11 месяцев назад +2

      We have a town near where I live that is rumored to the founder's name backward because he didn't want people to think he was too proud. I don't know it the story is true.

    • @MisterHowzat
      @MisterHowzat 7 месяцев назад +2

      But he didn't miswrite "Terrace" as "Ecarret" and record the name as ECARRET REDNAXELA. So, let's demote this legend to the status of myth.

    • @RachaelMorgan-om4xw
      @RachaelMorgan-om4xw 7 месяцев назад

      Brilliant! A quirky outcome to a clerical error! 🤭

    • @alexshabotenko7228
      @alexshabotenko7228 6 месяцев назад

      @@MisterHowzat Maybe it was supposed to be Redneck Cellar. Or seller?

  • @ivankaramasov
    @ivankaramasov Год назад +351

    I grew up close to Hell in Norway. It is surprising how often it freezes over.

    • @michaelbuley3373
      @michaelbuley3373 Год назад +30

      There's also a Hell in Michigan as well.

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson Год назад +6

      @@michaelbuley3373and in California ….

    • @BillGreenAZ
      @BillGreenAZ Год назад +6

      @@michaelbuley3373 I've seen the highway sign with the icycles on it. LOL.

    • @urgon6321
      @urgon6321 Год назад +21

      There is also Hel in Poland, they even had a bus line number 666, but some religious extremists forced them to change it. Poland also has at least seven villages named "Piekło", which means "Hell"...

    • @Mars-ev7qg
      @Mars-ev7qg Год назад +1

      I'm not sure how often the one in California freezes over. If it's in the mountains, it might freeze over.

  • @kkt1986
    @kkt1986 Год назад +296

    Just a little note on Aa and Å: The latter (the letter) is actually placed LAST in the Norwegian alphabet - just after our two other peculiar vowels Æ and Ø - so it does not challenge Aa's place at the alphabetical top of the list. It's pronounced like the English word "awe".

    • @Hand-in-Shot_Productions
      @Hand-in-Shot_Productions Год назад +31

      Right! So Aa is still, alphabetically, the first town on this list, while Å (in the Norwegian alphabet, not the English one) comes after Zzyzx. Also, it is kind of interesting that Å and A are on opposite ends of the alphabet.
      Thanks for the information!

    • @receivedpronunciation6696
      @receivedpronunciation6696 Год назад +18

      DANISH
      Old Spelling: ä, ö, aa
      New Spelling: æ, ø, å
      GERMAN
      Standard Spelling: ä, ö, ü, ß
      Alternatives when not found in keyboard: ae, oe, ue, sz/ss

    • @roygalaasen
      @roygalaasen Год назад +10

      @@receivedpronunciation6696Alternative spelling for the Norwegian letters æ, ø, å is ae, oe, aa respectively. (When the keys are lacking from the keyboard settings.)

    • @sheep1ewe
      @sheep1ewe Год назад +10

      @@roygalaasen Yes, but i where told they are not exactly as the Swedish equvivalents. 🙂 In Sweden we have a lot of places named Å or Ö (River and Island).

    • @roygalaasen
      @roygalaasen Год назад +5

      @@sheep1ewe no, you are probably right. Yes, I know that the Swedish Å and Ö are river and island. It is quite funny. Never actually though about it like that though. 😀

  • @nochan99
    @nochan99 11 месяцев назад +94

    Fun facts; In Norwegian, "Å" sorts last of our alphabet, the end of which is "xyzæøå", so while in English we say "from A to Z" in Norway we say "fra A til Å", making "Å" sort after "ZZYZX". Also, "Å" means "river" as in "Mang en bekk små gjør en stor å" let. "Many streams together make a large river".

    • @stevedallas4942
      @stevedallas4942 7 месяцев назад

      Eh?

    • @maxhoffmann6821
      @maxhoffmann6821 6 месяцев назад +5

      In Swedish, åäö follow xyz in the alphabet, so Ön just west of Stockholm would certainly place well behind that Zz place in California.

    • @FactoryofRedstone
      @FactoryofRedstone 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@maxhoffmann6821 Interesting. In German äöü are (most of the time) sorted as ae, oe, ue. Or alternatively after the "root" letter, but very rarely at the end.

    • @HotelPapa100
      @HotelPapa100 5 месяцев назад

      Aa and Ach are common river names in central Europe as well.

    • @biaberg3448
      @biaberg3448 3 месяца назад

      Norwegian: Mange bekker små gjør en stor å.

  • @Luubelaar
    @Luubelaar Год назад +134

    Australia has some brilliant ones: Blue Knob and Yorkey's Knob immediately come to mind.
    And then there's Climax in Canada. Their town limit sign says "Please come again". Very nice of them.

    • @notbotheredable
      @notbotheredable Год назад +3

      There's also a Big Knob on the north coast of NSW.

    • @maddomaddo9637
      @maddomaddo9637 Год назад +6

      Inaloo and Cockburn in WA 😆

    • @davidhiles2673
      @davidhiles2673 Год назад

      Is there a Bald Knob, like in West Virginia?

    • @philipwilkin1975
      @philipwilkin1975 Год назад +5

      In Victoria we have Mywee, Weerite and at the other side of the state Poowong

    • @timharrison1158
      @timharrison1158 Год назад +6

      There is a place in Tasmania called Nowhere Else.

  • @AnaIvanovic4ever
    @AnaIvanovic4ever Год назад +228

    Many hills and small lakes in Northern Finland have very obscene names. When Finland was ruled by tsarist Russia in the 19th century Russian land surveyors arrived to map out the country, and the locals basically trolled them by making up dirty names in Finnish.

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson Год назад +18

      Hahaha, that’s great! 😂

    • @chandrasunny
      @chandrasunny Год назад +23

      Love that they kept the joke names after all this time!

    • @Hand-in-Shot_Productions
      @Hand-in-Shot_Productions Год назад +15

      That's quite a hilarious name to insult the land surveyors, and by extension, the Russian Empire!
      Thanks for the information!

    • @SOBIESKI_freedom
      @SOBIESKI_freedom Год назад +15

      My favorite Finnish place name is Vittusaari.

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 Год назад +2

      @@SOBIESKI_freedom Meaning what?

  • @mwickholm
    @mwickholm Год назад +90

    South of Ingå in southern Finland there is a small island (max width and max length both just over 60 meters) called Hela världen, which means "the whole world" in Swedish. A megalomaniac tiny island.

    • @OmegamonUI
      @OmegamonUI 8 месяцев назад +1

      and in norway there are a town named hell. we in saxony have the town Oberhäßlich, wilsdruff, Poppengrün .

  • @EvsUnderscore
    @EvsUnderscore Год назад +110

    I remember my dad telling me a story from the 80s, when he lived in Arizona, about an almost abandoned town on the route he took to Las Vegas. The towns name was “Nothing” and had a population of only a few people at the time (now everyone is gone). The best part about the town is that the self-proclaimed mayors name was Les Payne. I know nobody will see this comment but I just wanted to archive the funny town name Nothing’s past.

    • @Frank-Lee-Speeking
      @Frank-Lee-Speeking 11 месяцев назад +13

      You've reminded me of a story I heard many years ago. I'm not sure if it is true or not but it's one of those stories that *should* be true. Apparently, there is a tombstone somewhere in the American West that commemorates a man who fell in a gunfight: "Here lies the body of Les Moore, killed by five bullets. No less, no more."

    • @RachaelMorgan-om4xw
      @RachaelMorgan-om4xw 8 месяцев назад

      @@Frank-Lee-Speeking Poor soul

    • @RachaelMorgan-om4xw
      @RachaelMorgan-om4xw 8 месяцев назад

      Evs, nice one! Less pain. Nothing's not past unnoticed. Thanks man 🤠🤗

    • @greengorillah
      @greengorillah 8 месяцев назад +1

      Intrigued by your comment I googled a bit. There is a nice short clip here on RUclips wen you search Nothing Arizona. You will see Les Payne and the store. The mayor was either self proclaimed or given 100 dollar for his name to be used as "mayor", in reality the place had no.

    • @AndrewAMartin
      @AndrewAMartin 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@Frank-Lee-Speeking The correct epitaph is "Here lies Lester Moore, killt with 2 bullets from a .44. No Les, no more." IIRC, it's from Boot Hill, Abilene, Kansas...

  • @DonPaliPalacios
    @DonPaliPalacios Год назад +92

    In Ecuador we have a large number of bizarre village names, including El Placer del Culo (The Pleasure of the Butthole), Pueblo Arrecho (Badass Town, or Horny Town), Muerto Parado (Dead Man Standing) and Come y Paga (Eat and Pay), all of which are in one single province, Manabí, famous for strange personal names and place names. A common place name in Spanish-speaking countries is Salsipuedes (meaning "get out if you can"), and of course there's one in Manabí as well.

    • @mati.benapezo
      @mati.benapezo Год назад

      Aquí (Chile) tenemos pueblos como Victoria y Nacimiento, y ciudades como Concepción y Los Ángeles.

    • @FluxTrax
      @FluxTrax Год назад +1

      Azores have a place called "Cu de Judas"

    • @robink.1903
      @robink.1903 Месяц назад +1

      I knew about Salsipuedes in Chile but didn't know they were in other places, as well. My husband also talks about Peor Es Nada in Chile, which means "Nothing is Worse."

  • @AstraFleur
    @AstraFleur Год назад +173

    𝗦𝗲𝘅𝗺𝗼𝗮𝗻, 𝖯𝗁𝗂𝗅𝗂𝗉𝗉𝗂𝗇𝖾𝗌
    Sexmoan was changed to Sasmuan on January 15, 1991, under the Republic Act No. 6976.
    The name Sexmoan was derived from the ancient Kapampangan root word "sasmo," which means "to meet".
    The town was known as Sexmoan until 1991 when the spelling was unanimously changed.
    The change was made to avoid the negative connotation of the name and to reflect the town's true history.

    • @fonkbadonk5370
      @fonkbadonk5370 Год назад +24

      I can't find anything negative in the previous name whatsoever! Quite the opposite really.

    • @sonkeschluter3654
      @sonkeschluter3654 Год назад

      ah just like the town of Fucking that changed to Fugging, Saves them a lot of money because the Town sign now stays up longer than a few days.

    • @HieronymousCheese
      @HieronymousCheese Год назад +19

      Asia has a few classics. Pee Pee Island, for example.

    • @Redf322
      @Redf322 Год назад +16

      France has a town called Arse on the ille de Raye

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson Год назад +10

      @@HieronymousCheeseThere is to this day a restaurant in Berkeley CA called King Dong. I’ve been laughing about that for over 40 years now.

  • @LouisaDD
    @LouisaDD Год назад +541

    «Assuming you’ve been able to find the place»😂

    • @austenhead5303
      @austenhead5303 Год назад +47

      That was a lagh-out-loud joke. If you hadn't made a comment to properly appreciate it, I would have.

    • @helenbartoszek243
      @helenbartoszek243 Год назад +23

      That was a good joke, made me lol. 😄

    • @dorisw5558
      @dorisw5558 Год назад +17

      only women get it

    • @CAP198462
      @CAP198462 Год назад +60

      I’ve heard that before, but I can’t put my finger on it.

    • @FilosophicalPharmer
      @FilosophicalPharmer Год назад +6

      Geography Spots are fun to find.

  • @mattwales2734
    @mattwales2734 9 месяцев назад +32

    I live in Truth or Consequences, NM. The locals call it T or C for short. The school district refused to change their name, so kids around here still attend Hot Springs High School. A section of town was so upset about the name change that they broke off from the city and became the village of Williamsburg.

    • @jwells3315
      @jwells3315 5 месяцев назад +1

      Yes been through there

    • @LisaBeta-42
      @LisaBeta-42 4 месяца назад +4

      Had an important role in a Doctor Who story (12th Doctor) where a lot of inhabitants got killed by invading aliens from a special protection program...

    • @victorsamsung2921
      @victorsamsung2921 4 месяца назад

      T&C ... the name of a new tv channel. 😂

    • @rustyshackleford6927
      @rustyshackleford6927 Месяц назад

      @@LisaBeta-42I literally just watched that ep for the first time a couple days ago! At first I didn’t believe it was a real place… then I remembered it’s America… and so it was too weird as to be fake lmao

  • @idraote
    @idraote Год назад +109

    I think Dull twinning with Boring and Bland deserves a special prize.
    As for the Welsh town with the long name, I think they inadvertently used as name the instructions to reach and recognise the place...
    "Tell me, John, how do I reach that place you mentioned yesterday?"
    "I'll write you a note, James, it's easier"

    • @StarchildMagic
      @StarchildMagic Год назад +19

      Dull, Boring, and Bland are sometimes called "the trifecta of tedium."

    • @human_isomer
      @human_isomer Год назад +9

      those Welsh names could actually have been a clever way to navigate to the places in times where no other navigation existed... "first go to the-little-swampy-lake-close-to-the-big-oak-tree, and from there on, you can see the-village-with-the-white-painted-church, after which you will come to Saint-Marys-Church-in-the-Hollow-of-the-white-Hazel-near-to-the-rapid-whirlpool-of-Llantisilio-of-the-red-cave". But if you end up in the-summit-where-Tamatea,-the-man-with-the-big-knees,-the-climber-of-mountains,-the-land-swallower-who-travelled-about,-played-his-nose-flute-to-his-loved-one (Taumatawhakatangi­hangakoauauotamatea­turipukakapikimaunga­horonukupokaiwhen­uakitanatahu), you took the wrong turn - because this is in New Zealand.
      And because most people were not capable of reading and writing these days, the spelling of Llanfairpwll­gwyngyllgogery­chwyrndrobwll­llantysilio­gogogoch was at anyone's guess 😁
      (joking, of course - according to Wikipedia, it was probably a stunt to attract tourists).

    • @rogink
      @rogink Год назад +2

      @@human_isomer Yes, but I don't think there is anything 'probably' about Llanfair PG's name.

    • @human_isomer
      @human_isomer Год назад

      @@rogink sure, I just said "probably" because I didn't check the sources on wikipedia.

    • @davidhopkins7270
      @davidhopkins7270 Год назад +1

      Needy and Cornucopia are both in Oregon.

  • @rovanderby759
    @rovanderby759 Год назад +187

    Recently I heard that the village of Fucking, Austria, replaced the normal metal plate road sign at the entrance of the village with one made of concrete that weighs a ton, because tourists kept stealing the old one time and time again.

    • @ExcretumTaurum
      @ExcretumTaurum Год назад +84

      “Please stop stealing the Fucking town sign”

    • @YieldOnly
      @YieldOnly Год назад +47

      It's even worse: Things got to the point where in 2021 they changed the spelling to "Fugging", just so people would stop. I don't know if it helped though.
      Also: Beers are often named after the town they originated from (e.g. Pilsner from Pilsen in Czechia). Also, a type of german lager is called "Helles" (often shortened to "Hell") for its light color. "Fucking Hell", a beer named after a town it is not brewed in and a type that it is technically not.

    • @rstrassburg
      @rstrassburg Год назад +12

      @@YieldOnlyyou can also visit the Fuggerei in Augsburg, Germany, founded by the businessman Jakob Fugger.

    • @thecatsarealright
      @thecatsarealright Год назад +7

      ​@YieldOnly Well, it did help, sort of. Initially, the new signs were spray painted over so they read "Fucking" after all. But that seems to have been a onetime occurrence.

    • @andrasjozsa1981
      @andrasjozsa1981 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@rstrassburg The houses in former Fuggerei built the first sheltered housing in the worls. However, the House of Fugger was so rich that they could buy whole towns or influence kings when they have conflict with the family or with other kings, dukes.

  • @BeeMcDee
    @BeeMcDee Год назад +82

    The one that always makes me laugh is: In Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia, there’s a road called Dick Ward Drive that enters into Fannie Bay. ‘Fannie’ means something very different in Australia than it does in America.

    • @morrigambist
      @morrigambist Год назад +6

      I got the story from a business associate that Australian visitors got a good laugh at an exercise equipment store using a sign "fanny reducers".

    • @darthdmc
      @darthdmc Год назад

      It means the same in the UK too

    • @kevinbalsdon4705
      @kevinbalsdon4705 Год назад +2

      What about Bullshit Hill in South Australia.

    • @Tony_Malini
      @Tony_Malini 10 месяцев назад

      Blackbutt NSW 😂

  • @LuXx_CraftYT
    @LuXx_CraftYT 9 месяцев назад +19

    In Santa Fe, Argentina, there is a town called «Venado Tuerto», which translates into "One-eyed Deer".
    In La Pampa there's a town called «Carro Quemado», "Burnt Cart"
    And in Córdoba there's a town named «Salsipuedes», literally "GetOutIfYouCan".

    • @jorgelotr3752
      @jorgelotr3752 6 месяцев назад

      Quite interesting that Argentinians called a town what Spanyards call streets.

    • @jan_Eten
      @jan_Eten 13 дней назад

      ðat last one is sooo ominous

  • @BrBobMackeSJ
    @BrBobMackeSJ Год назад +99

    One of my favorites is the town of Peculiar, Missouri. The story is that the postmaster couldn't find a name acceptable to the postmaster general, so he wrote, "We don't care what name you give us so long as it is sort of peculiar." I used to vacation in a cabin in the woods just a little past the town. We called the cabin "Beyond Peculiar."

    • @ptorq
      @ptorq Год назад +8

      I see somebody beat me to Peculiar, so here's some more interesting place names in Missouri. Under the heading of "named after another city" there's Versailles (pronounced verSAILS) and New Madrid (new MADrid) When some settlers from Raleigh, North Carolina were looking to name their new town they didn't want the same thing to happen to them, so they spelled it so it would be pronounced "correctly": Rolla.

    • @wombat4191
      @wombat4191 Год назад +4

      Would be even funnier if the place was named Sort of Peculiar

    • @felicitybywater8012
      @felicitybywater8012 Год назад

      I ducking love it.

    • @36736fps
      @36736fps 11 месяцев назад

      Passed through Peculiar often on the road to Roach, MO.

    • @judypeipert1619
      @judypeipert1619 8 месяцев назад

      @@ptorq Not to mention Nevada (neVAHda), and Missouri itself (as missURuh) depending where you are at. Also in my odyessy for stupidity, I found Yukon in Texas (County). It's near Houston. (In Texas county.) Across the river there's Alhambra, which most pronounce (alHAmbra) but is actually (alHAMbra).

  • @oliverscratch
    @oliverscratch Год назад +50

    I once met a woman from Slapout, Alabama. She said there was once a single store in that crossroads village, and it was never well stocked. Whatever you asked for, you were likely to hear the clerk say he was "Slap out of it." In American Southernese "slap out" roughly translates to "completely out."

    • @matthewgrumbling4993
      @matthewgrumbling4993 Год назад +9

      For a moment there I thought you were starting a limerick

    • @EricHunt
      @EricHunt Год назад +1

      There's also the famous bergs of Lick Skillet, Alabama, and Smoke Rise, Alabama

    • @HuckleberryHim
      @HuckleberryHim Год назад +11

      @@matthewgrumbling4993 Met a woman from Slapout in 'Bama
      She said with a bit of a stammer
      "In this state by the sea,
      We've got family trees
      Such that my sister's my gramma"

  • @dorisw5558
    @dorisw5558 Год назад +84

    The amount of puns in this one is outstanding, as always.

    • @buddharuci2701
      @buddharuci2701 Год назад +5

      You clearly meant, “number of puns”. An amount of puns would be a pile of ground up puns ready for weighing. (Oh, my poor language! What have they done to you? I will go down fighting to the very end.)

    • @David280GG
      @David280GG Год назад

      Deez bolz

  • @Newblackpoet
    @Newblackpoet 10 месяцев назад +8

    Chilean native here. We have our fair share of weird town names. Peor Es Nada ( It's Worse To Own Nothing) in the 7h Region. The story is that a landowner died and left most of his estate to his sons and only a small part to her only daughter. The lady shrugged her shoulders and said the phrase before and so the town got is name. Another example is Las Coimas ( literally The Bribes), a little town in the Valparaiso region which took its name after a local Customs post that operated there. Being an isolated post it's easy to assume that the customs officers had some dubious practices when checking baggage. And there's also Purgatory, a small town near the Nahuelbuta range, named like that because going into and out of the place is extremely difficult due to the conditions of the road. Very funny video, by the way, Rob.

  • @Benwut
    @Benwut Год назад +39

    here in Western Australia, we have Misery Beach, Cape Knob, Scented Knob, and many more.

    • @RachaelMorgan-om4xw
      @RachaelMorgan-om4xw 8 месяцев назад +2

      Scented Knob!!!!!! Too...many....jokes... 😊

    • @michaelwisniewski6047
      @michaelwisniewski6047 8 месяцев назад

      You also have Dismal Swamp…

    • @johnclapshoe8059
      @johnclapshoe8059 7 месяцев назад +4

      There's Iron Knob in SA and Yorkeys Knob in QLD. Seems Australia likes Knobs.

    • @michaellay7164
      @michaellay7164 7 месяцев назад +1

      Better Scented Knob than Knob Scented.

  • @georgiancrossroads
    @georgiancrossroads Год назад +97

    Rob, please do consider Chicken Alaska. It is a small town with a very strange name origin story. Nearby is Eagle Alaska. So this town wanted to name itself after an Alaskan bird too. So they chose the ptarmigan. But no one could agree on how to spell it. So someone finally just said "Let's just call it chicken and be done with it." And that sounded like a reasonable solution to them.

    • @djdissi
      @djdissi Год назад +3

      😂

    • @lisahuband583
      @lisahuband583 Год назад +4

      You forgot dead horse Alaska

    • @sandraashton868
      @sandraashton868 Год назад +2

      I've always wanted to go to Chicken as it is a blink and you'd miss it kind of place but it has a twenty four hour license bar!!!!

    • @georgiancrossroads
      @georgiancrossroads Год назад

      @@sandraashton868 Yeah and it's really out there on a dirt road too.

    • @TheeGrumpy
      @TheeGrumpy Год назад +3

      On the drive to Deadhorse, keep an eye out for Gobbler's Knob, just north of Coldfoot.

  • @jenjohnson2204
    @jenjohnson2204 Год назад +31

    Hey Rob! Florida has a great town named: Niceville. It used to be called Boggy, but the postman's daughter renamed it in 1910.

    • @johngavin1175
      @johngavin1175 Год назад

      It's in the panhandle,isn't it? So is Two Egg. I'm from Lakeland, but the furthest I have been away is St. Augustine and Perry. I always heard the panhandle was nice.

  • @geraldwalsh6489
    @geraldwalsh6489 Год назад +15

    In Ireland,we have funny placenames such as Kilmacow, Mooncoin, Leap, Cork, Pilltown, Porridgetown, Kill, Trim, Kilkenny,Mallow, Hospital, Effin,and many more

    • @kevinnolan1339
      @kevinnolan1339 7 месяцев назад +1

      Mustn't forget Muff in County Donegal!

    • @IamMisterMonty
      @IamMisterMonty 7 месяцев назад +1

      And also Nober and the river Suck

    • @JBond-zf4dj
      @JBond-zf4dj 7 месяцев назад +3

      You should check out Newfoundland names....they are your Irish cousins. Dildo, Conception Bay, Random Island, Blow Me Down, etc.

  • @ve2vfd
    @ve2vfd Год назад +148

    You probably could have made a video like this just about Newfoudland... so many funny place names there. From Tickle Cove to Come By Chance, from Virgin Cove to Conception Bay and Happy Valley. Newfoundland is one happy place. :)

    • @FilosophicalPharmer
      @FilosophicalPharmer Год назад +10

      One of those Newfoundland towns should partner with the town of Climax here in North Carolina. 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @jrzshor
      @jrzshor Год назад

      @@FilosophicalPharmer or Intercourse PA

    •  Год назад +9

      Come by Chance sounds like the name of a second hand / vintage shop xD

    • @Incandescentiron
      @Incandescentiron Год назад +7

      I went to a pre-K school called "Happy Valley". It was definitely not happy, I hated that school.

    • @FilosophicalPharmer
      @FilosophicalPharmer Год назад

      @@pipmitchell7059 I honestly don’t know why I wrote Nova Scotia! 🫣😲😱 Edit: corrected. I just couldn’t stand mistake remaining for all to see! 😜👍🏼

  • @benjaminwinter1145
    @benjaminwinter1145 Год назад +44

    Thank you for the video! I would appreciate a second part.
    From the top of my head I know two weird German village names: Linsengericht ("Lentil Dish") and Deppendorf ("Moron's Village")

    • @rabomarc
      @rabomarc Год назад +1

      There’s also a village (or town, not sure) in Thuringen called Lederhose. Always brings a smile!

    • @DChivers-ku3en
      @DChivers-ku3en Год назад

      Und Pulverdingen (powery things)

    • @Frank-Lee-Speeking
      @Frank-Lee-Speeking 8 месяцев назад

      I've been through Dusseldorf on a train but I've always wondered what the "Dussel" part meant. In my mother's dialect of German - she grew up in Schleswig - a "dussel" (not sure about the spelling) is an idiot but I'm having trouble believing a major city name translates as "idiots town". Then again, given the other examples in this town, I suppose anything is possible.

  • @JonahIronstone
    @JonahIronstone Год назад +32

    No mention of Pant-y-wacco, Wales? Perhaps in the next video. (Please make more of these-- if playing GeoGuessr has taught me nothing else, it's that there are more ridiculous placenames in the world than we thought.)

  • @Smoo1977
    @Smoo1977 8 месяцев назад +9

    So here in Germany we have a few ones, too.
    Ostereistedt, Hymendorf. Drangstedt and Flögeln close to each other north of Rotenburg (Wümme), translating to Easter Egg Town (if you pronounce it slightly wrong), Hymen Village, Urge Town and let's say Blonk or Fluck.
    Büchsenschinken near Reinbek - Canned Ham.
    Lederhose near Gera, Leather Trousers.
    Regenmantel near Seelow, Rain Coat.
    Oberkaka and Unterkaka near Zeitz, Upper and Lower Poo-Poo.
    Petting near Traunstein, well, Petting.
    Poing near München (or Munich if you so wish), which you could decipher as a word for Mooning in a German-English neologism.
    Wixhausen, roughly Wank Houses, which is a part of Darmstadt, Colon City.
    Kotzen near Rathenow, To-Vooomit (due to the long o the name has instead of the short one in the verb)
    Pissen near Leipzig, To-Piss
    and finally Hackpfüffel, which does not translate to anywhere, but sounds like a comic writer needed a funny word.
    Additional Amerika, Texas, Brasilien, Kalifornien and the like, but they don't qualify as funny, I guess.
    In Austria there was the village Fucking (the u pronounced with the sound from look, not with that from fuck), but after years of getting the city limit signs stolen they decided to now go by the name of Fugging.

    • @jimbim4405
      @jimbim4405 5 месяцев назад

      You also hit the town of Wankum when you drive in from Netherlands

    • @Smoo1977
      @Smoo1977 5 месяцев назад

      @kti5682 They are quite close to each other in the Harz (Resin, a mountain range), aren't they?

    • @jurgen6902
      @jurgen6902 3 месяца назад

      ich möchte hinzufügen:
      Geilsdorf (zip: 08538) -> geil (eng. horny) and dorf (engl. village)
      Tuntenhausen (close to Freising, close to Munich) -> "Tunte" is a very unfriendly word in german for a male gay person (adding the n means just plural) and hausen (eng.home)
      Tittenkoofen (zip code: 85447) -> i guess u english native speakers could guess what "Titten" might means. correct, it's tits. And koofen doesn't exist in modern day german but it sounds in some dialects like "kaufen" (eng. buy)
      In the Czech Republic:
      Kuttenplan (cz: Chodová Planá, zip: 348 15) -> Kutten (eng.: cowls) and plan is also in english plan

  • @danvernier198
    @danvernier198 Год назад +54

    There's a small borough in the outskirts of Stockholm named Pungpinan, which translates as "The Scrotum Pain". The reason is that historically the word that today is primarily used for scrotum in Swedish was historically used for coin purses and there was supposedly a particularly expensive inn there.

    • @peter_kitsune
      @peter_kitsune Год назад +2

      Wait... coin purses were made from old scrotums?

    • @tubros
      @tubros Год назад

      I imagine the town on Monsteras is funny to English speakers.

    • @ecphorizer
      @ecphorizer 10 месяцев назад

      @@peter_kitsuneThe plural is "scrota" BTW.

  • @cyberherbalist
    @cyberherbalist Год назад +44

    There is a town in New York state called Fishkill. The name comes from the Dutch as "vis kill", and in their language it means "fish creek." But this didn't stop PETA members from petitioning the town council to rename it "Fishsafe."

    • @MultiBLACKY100
      @MultiBLACKY100 Год назад +10

      lol, gotta give it to PETA, they really know how to troll

    • @j_taylor
      @j_taylor Год назад +10

      The nearby Catskill mountains are lovely, especially in the autumn.

    • @wich1
      @wich1 Год назад +4

      In modern Dutch kill certainly doesn’t mean creek. Do you have a reference on the origin of the name? I wonder if it’s some bastardization of some old Dutch word.

    • @ToniAllen
      @ToniAllen Год назад +5

      I used to live in Slaughterville, OK (Named for a founding member) and PETA once tried to get them to change their name to "Veggieville" in exchange for free vegetarian meals for the school...which Slaughterville doesn't have, because Slaughterville is nothing more than 2 dozen mobile homes and a giant, fantastically creepy bug sculpture made from an old VW Beetle.

    • @JiveDadson
      @JiveDadson Год назад +2

      As a software engineer, I once had business in Fishkill. There was (is?) a sprawling IBM facility there that was basically its own town, complete with a modern Fire Department.

  • @holdermeddk
    @holdermeddk Год назад +32

    You forgot Middelfart in Denmark!

  • @kildevang98
    @kildevang98 5 месяцев назад +6

    In Denmark we have a town called Sæd (Semen) and Tarm (Intestine). Recently there was an accident in Tarm involving manure leaking from a silo, giving the colourful title of an article "Gylle-drama i Tarm" (Manure drama in Tarm).

    • @koohla
      @koohla 4 месяца назад

      Dont forget the town of Lem (member);)

  • @leonwilkinson8124
    @leonwilkinson8124 Год назад +51

    Rob, great stuff as always! Let me do something of a Texas boast: I think we have more funny names of towns than anywhere else. Witness: Oatmeal, Gravy, Matador, Bacon, Noodle, Noodle Dome, Heckville, Finney Switch, Happy Union, New Deal, Ding-Dong, Jot-Em-Down, Cut and Shoot, Bigfoot, Gun Barrel City, Bug Tussle, Frognot, Dimebox, Uncertain, and, of course, our own Nameless. In addition, you can travel the world and not leave Texas. Here's your itinerary: Athens, Naples, Geneva, Paris, Moscow, and closer to home: Dublin, Edinburgh, Liverpool, Newcastle, and--why not?--London.

    • @rogerhorky7258
      @rogerhorky7258 Год назад +9

      You forgot Mobeetie, Texas (population 101), and New Mobeetie. 'Cos one town named for a native word for "buffalo dung" (allegedly) ain't enough.

    • @morrigambist
      @morrigambist Год назад +7

      Virginia has Frog Level and Squirrel Level. I can't help but wonder what they leveled...

    • @LymanPhillips
      @LymanPhillips Год назад +2

      And also Wink.

    • @dldove22
      @dldove22 Год назад +2

      Flower Mound too.

    • @ShizuruNakatsu
      @ShizuruNakatsu 11 месяцев назад

      "Oatmeal? Are you crazy?!"

  • @grahamcameron4619
    @grahamcameron4619 Год назад +22

    "Assuming you've been able to find the place" really got me.

  • @mugi2595
    @mugi2595 Год назад +48

    Fun fact: Monster in Dutch is exactly the same as in English, so here, we find it a funny place name as well. In addition to Monster, we also have Goor (disgusting) en Sexbierum (bier means beer).

    • @Secret_Agent_Mark
      @Secret_Agent_Mark Год назад +4

      Or Rectum, a hamlet (in the vicinity of Goor) in east part of the country

    • @robert-trading-as-Bob69
      @robert-trading-as-Bob69 Год назад +4

      WHAT! Monster in Dutch and Afrikaans means : SAMPLE.

    • @mugi2595
      @mugi2595 Год назад +3

      @@robert-trading-as-Bob69 It also means sample, yes.

    • @robert-trading-as-Bob69
      @robert-trading-as-Bob69 Год назад

      @mugi2595 I was in a rush when I typed that.. battery was dying.
      It is used for both in Afrikaans today, not just as sample.

    • @deetgeluid
      @deetgeluid 9 месяцев назад +1

      And we have a town called Hulk.

  • @whackjjob1972
    @whackjjob1972 Год назад +4

    I live in Oregon. The highway sign to Boring also shows that you can get to Oregon City on the same route, thus, if you're driving you'll see a sign for "Boring Oregon City", which I always found funny.

  • @Spiklething
    @Spiklething Год назад +18

    So happy to hear someone finally mention Cocking. I went to school in Cocking, Cocking Primary School to be exact although it is no longer there, demolished many years ago to make way for houses. Living in the area near Cocking, over the years, many signposts were graffited or even stolen. On a recent trip home to visit my mother, I noticed that they have now removed Cocking from the signpost (probably to save money replacing it). However, I never lived in Cocking. I grew up 3 miles away from Cocking in a tiny little hamlet called... Didling. I now live in Scotland, about 20 miles from Dull

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 6 месяцев назад

      Obviously all this cocking up and diddling around makes Spikle a dull thing. Maybe not the fate you hoped for..

  • @SnakeandSidney
    @SnakeandSidney Год назад +24

    In Tuscany, Italy there are two small towns near one another, one called Pesciamorta - the name meaning 'dead fish' in Italian, and Femminamorta, meaning 'dead woman' - both are lovely places 🙂

    • @Caldwing
      @Caldwing 9 месяцев назад +1

      I live in a city called Coquitlam, which is from an indigenous place-name meaning "place where the fish stink." There's a bend in the river where the dead salmon from the spawning would build up.

  • @bigscarysteve
    @bigscarysteve Год назад +54

    Speaking of odd place name origins, there's a small in town in West Virginia that used to be called Molehill. I wish I knew the origin of that name, but I don't. It's probably an interesting story. Anyhow, in the 1930's, someone started a campaign to change the town's name because they claimed they thought it sounded stupid. They finally convinced enough people to approve the change, and the ceremony where the change was officially made legal was broadcast on the radio. The town's name was changed to Mountain. At the end of the ceremony, someone said over the radio, "And now, ladies and gentlemen, we've made a mountain out of a molehill."

    • @valivali8104
      @valivali8104 Год назад +4

      I have feeling that most of people wanted name change to make fool of original complainer; wish that someone would have filmed their face after that pun 🤣

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Год назад

      @@valivali8104 No, it was the original complainer who made a fool of everyone else.

    • @valivali8104
      @valivali8104 Год назад

      @@bigscarysteve was they one who made that pun?

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Год назад

      @@valivali8104 Yes.

    • @sandrafaith
      @sandrafaith Год назад +7

      I am going to believe that someone set this all into motion JUST to make that joke.

  • @svenlima
    @svenlima Год назад +27

    The German word "Egg" has nothing to do with an egg but derives from "Ecke" which means "corner".
    There's a village nearby which is called Egg and this village is near a small lake; and the village Egg has a public bath on the lake shore. The German word for 'bath' is 'Bad'. So the street sign showing the way to the bath of the village Egg says "Bad Egg =>". My English speaking visitors have a good laugh each time they visit me.

    • @CologneCarter
      @CologneCarter 10 месяцев назад +2

      This reminds me of a slogan put on trucks/lorries some years ago here in Germany. It said "Bad Designs". While it is technically a correct German phrase, it sadly backfired since too many Germans have learned English in school and use it regularly on the Internet.
      For all those English Natives out there, the phrase actually says bathroom design and Bad is the abbreviation of Badezimmer, wich means bathroom.

    • @HotelPapa100
      @HotelPapa100 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@CologneCarter "Bathroom" of course has been shanghaied by the USAians to mean something differrent. So even that doesn't get you off the hook.

  • @kyleolson8977
    @kyleolson8977 Год назад +43

    I can't speak for the city of Monster, but there's a historical example here in Washington state for "Monster" as a Surname. Renton, WA has a "Monster Road" named for the Monster family of settlers. If you search for "Baby Monster Grave" you'll find the headstone of "Baby Monster" from the cemetery in Kent, WA where the Monster family is buried.

    • @Muchenaft
      @Muchenaft Год назад +1

      Hi ! Apparently, as for Münster (germany), it could come from the name "Monastery"
      I didnt know some people were named "monster", thats a strange surname !

    • @tzyijiang9884
      @tzyijiang9884 Год назад

      @@MuchenaftMünster, name of a city in Germany.

    • @CaritasGothKaraoke
      @CaritasGothKaraoke Год назад

      People named Monster or Munster are named after the career. Which is funny because pretty much all monks are supposed to not have kids.

    • @robinhays8779
      @robinhays8779 Год назад +1

      Monster means pattern in Swedish

    • @aussieevonne7857
      @aussieevonne7857 Год назад

      According to (the Dutch) Wikipedia, the origin of the name of the town Monster is unclear. It may have come from the latin name for cloister/monastery - monasterium - but there was no monastery there, only a large church. It was also a place of pilgrimage. The settlement originated in the tenth century CE. Apparently, an older name for the place was Masamuda, which would have meant Mouth of the (river) Maas.
      The word "monster" in modern Dutch means both a "sample" and, just as in English, a grotesque being.

  • @maxximumb
    @maxximumb Год назад +13

    We used to visit Cocking every summer to visit my great aunt. It was a quite long and boring journey, apart from when we passed through Wyre Piddle.

  • @Kreypossukr
    @Kreypossukr Год назад +17

    In France there’s a famous town named Montcuq ! It is heard as « Mon cul » which can be translated as « my ass », so there’s tons and tons of jokes that have been done around its name !

  • @cindyclark8998
    @cindyclark8998 Год назад +7

    PLEASE make more name/place videos. I laughed SO hard!😅

    • @OmegamonUI
      @OmegamonUI 8 месяцев назад

      in austria there are a towned fugging old name fucking.

  • @almeisam
    @almeisam Год назад +35

    There's Mexican Hat, Utah, named after a local geologic formation. And the ghost town of Mosquito, Colorado. The townsfolks (miners) were meeting, attempting to come up with a name for their settlement. Before they could come up with one, the called the end of the meeting, When the next met, the opened up the minutes of the previous meeting and found a mosquito squashed between the pages, and they adopted that as the name of their town, the creek flowing past it, the mining district, and the pass between them and Leadville (named for the lead that was getting hung up in their sluices while gold mining, later to be found full of silver).

    • @timcreations8059
      @timcreations8059 Год назад +2

      I have been to Mexican Hat. Very very small town. They have a motel in a canyon that me and my family stayed in.
      There is another ghost town in Colorado named Tomboy. Not far from another town my family went to.

    • @djdissi
      @djdissi Год назад +2

      There's also a Medicine Hat, Alberta

    • @Frank-Lee-Speeking
      @Frank-Lee-Speeking 8 месяцев назад

      Alberta, Canada has a city called Medicine Hat. It's Wikipedia article describes the theories about the origins of the name.

  • @SIC647
    @SIC647 Год назад +24

    A Danish one that sounds funny in English, is Middelfart. It means Middle Journey and refers to it being half way on a travel from one end of the country to the other.
    Fart means journey, speed, travel, and is also used in "fartkontrol": Speed control.

    • @MarkUKInsects
      @MarkUKInsects Год назад +2

      You beet me to Middelfart
      Book shop in danish causes Brits some amusement too

    • @SIC647
      @SIC647 Год назад +1

      @MarkUKInsects Bog handle. I had never thought of that one. 😄
      My English aunt finds it quaint that we still call pharmacies apotek/apothecary.

    • @DannyMonaghan69
      @DannyMonaghan69 Год назад +4

      I don't live far away from Rude. As a Brit in Denmark, I found in rather amusing the first time I saw it - it had never occurred to my Danish wife what it said 😁

    • @SIC647
      @SIC647 Год назад +4

      @DannyMonaghan69 I once did business with a Czech man called Pik. It was so awkward. 😬
      His full name was Pikous, and I said that I felt more comfortable being formal and using his full name. If I hadn't, I would have giggled like a 12-year-old. I didn't tell him the truth.

    • @justsomeguy5103
      @justsomeguy5103 Год назад

      Denmark has a lot of place names that sound ridicolous - either because they actually mean something funny, or because they just have a dirty ring to them. Pictures of Danish direction signs used to be classic internet humour in Norway before memes were a thing.

  • @jarls5890
    @jarls5890 Год назад +88

    "Å" is not only a placename it is actually a word, meaning stream or river.

    • @smoker_joe
      @smoker_joe Год назад +10

      Interesting. There is actually a river in the north of France called Aa

    • @holdermeddk
      @holdermeddk Год назад +19

      Å is besides the last letter in the alphabet. At least in Denmark. And Norway.

    • @jarls5890
      @jarls5890 Год назад +21

      @@smoker_joe May be related?! I looked up the etymology for "Å" (Norwegian, small river/stream).
      Turns out back in the day it was spelled... Aa/aa.
      Root is norse: Á
      Then i found that a protonorse word for water is "Ahva". Possibly related.
      Update, found some more: "Ahva" is suspiciously similar to "Aqua". The are related! Proto germanic "akhwo". (hard to say which came first).
      BUT!!! There is an old English word for river, related, "Ea". HAh! It is basically the same word! "Å" - "Ea".
      Trivia: Å would mean "any river". If you are referencing a specific river it would be åa or åen (adding a or en to the ending., "a" ending if the dialect consider river to be female or "en" if the dialect consider it to be male).

    • @masterimbecile
      @masterimbecile Год назад +1

      So if I drop my phone in the river I should say “Å no!”

    • @mwickholm
      @mwickholm Год назад +6

      @@holdermeddk In Swedish and Finnish it ends Å, Ä, Ö. I've always found it strange how you have them in the order Æ, Ø, Å.

  • @darylhood5832
    @darylhood5832 Год назад +3

    Fabulous video! Great sense of humour! Excellent delivery! Bravo!!!
    MORE PLEASE!!!!

  • @edwardblair4096
    @edwardblair4096 Год назад +8

    6:20 "I'm not gonna keep that bit in, it's terrible." 😆

  • @johncassels3475
    @johncassels3475 Год назад +8

    Thanks for the mention of Ugley near where I grew up - and yes, there really is (or was 50 years ago) "The Ugley Women's Institute!" It's not that far from Six Mile Bottom, but you plumbed the depths of that joke with much better examples ...

  • @debbscustomengravings5226
    @debbscustomengravings5226 Год назад +34

    And in South Africa (in case I missed it) Tweebuffelsmeteenskootmorsdoodgeskietfontein, which is actually a farm and is the 4th longest place name in the world. It means "the spring where two buffaloes were killed with a single shot.

  • @BillGreenAZ
    @BillGreenAZ 7 месяцев назад +5

    The state of Arizona has quite a few oddly named places such as:
    Why, Carefree, Nothing, Christmas, Three Way, Strawberry, Dragoon, Surprise, Mexican Water, Top-Of-The-World, So-Hi, Show Low, Santa Claus, Snowflake, Wagon Wheel, Love, Avenue B and C (just one city, not two).

    • @ieatalgae
      @ieatalgae 6 месяцев назад +1

      There's also-- Tuba City, Mammoth, Many Farms, Klondyke, Coffee Pot, Beaver Dam, Ash Fork, Mexican Water, Blue Gap, Round Rock, and Rough Rock. Other than Tuba City and a couple others, I have no idea how populated they are.
      In New Mexico, there's Elephant Butte, too, though a Butte is a real landmark.
      You can find a lot of weird towns just by surfing Google Maps lol

  • @carolfarina9120
    @carolfarina9120 Год назад +11

    You should do more. You could create a whole series on this topic, so many places come to mind. Tarzana California, which is named after Tarzan who is a character in a book, Lake Titicaca, and so many examples already in the comments.

  • @rickleefs
    @rickleefs Год назад +7

    My father grew up in Looneyville, West Virginia. My great-grandmother's maiden name was Looney.

  • @marcdigiambattista751
    @marcdigiambattista751 Год назад +10

    There are also several parts of Melbourne Australia named "Batman", and the city itself was almost named "Batmania" after the founding figure of John Batman. I remember meeting a woman who had recently arrived from the UK, and it just happened to be in the middle of an election campaign. There were signs all over the part of town she was staying in with pictures of candidates as "Greens for Batman" or "Liberal for Batman", "Your local Independent for the community of Batman". She was utterly bemused as to why politicians were advertising themselves as advocates of a super hero, until I explained that the electorate was actually named after John Batman.

    • @BobHutton
      @BobHutton 7 месяцев назад

      Although we do pronounce it differently to the superhero. We pronounce it more like Batmin, with the "i" barely being pronounced. My suburb, Coburg, in northern Melbourne, shares the same postcode as Batman. I've had a few puzzled looks from check-in staff at foreign hotels when they have checked my postcode and had it come up with Batman (since "b" comes before "c").

  • @spervuurproduksies
    @spervuurproduksies 11 месяцев назад +16

    There is a farm in South Africa named: Tweebuffelsmeteenskoot­morsdoodgeskietfontein. It means "Two buffaloes killed with one shot, fountain". Also strange that in South Africa, there are a multitude of places named after a fountain, without there being any noticeable fountains in the area.

    • @HotelPapa100
      @HotelPapa100 9 месяцев назад +1

      Isn't fontein also source, spring? So might have been places where you could find even dug up water.

    • @spervuurproduksies
      @spervuurproduksies 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@HotelPapa100 Could be. You are probably right.

    • @douglasclerk2764
      @douglasclerk2764 9 месяцев назад +1

      In Afrikaans 'fountain' does mean spring - i.e. a place where underground water comes to the surface. In a water-stressed country, you tend to get obsessed with such things.

    • @seamonster936
      @seamonster936 6 месяцев назад

      Daar is ook ‘n snaakse spelling van die Zoeloe wapen as ‘n voorstad van Durban, ‘Assagay’.

    • @MatthewDeanCrabb
      @MatthewDeanCrabb 3 месяца назад

      Modderfontein, meaning mud fountain. Eat some KFC there and you may develop a mud fountain!

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Год назад +20

    Here in NY, we have our fair share of weird names. Like Coxsackie! No, it's not what you're thinking. It's supposed to be pronounced cook-sock-ee. The name from the Algonquin word mak-kachs-hack-ing. When the land was purchased by the Dutch settlers, the name was written as Koxhackung. It is generally translated as "Hoot-owl place" or "place of many owls". Or Chili! Despite the way it's spelled, it was named in honor of Chile. But it's not pronounced like Chile either, it's instead pronounced as CHY-lye. There's also Mexico! It's both the name of a village and the name of the township the village is in. The first Mexico (a proposed county), with all the surrounding towns, was originally created from Town of Whitestown, Oneida County in April 1792
    The original organization of the proposed Mexico County and a town of that name was abandoned for a time. In December 1794, German-born George Frederick William Augustus Scriba purchased and patented a large tract of land, subsequently becoming a second Mexico, hence the Village of Mexico and the Town of Mexico. George named it Mexico because he had a special interest in Central America. It was renamed to Vera Cruz for a bit as George Scriba hoped that the City of Mexico (or Vera Cruz), now town of Mexico, would grow to become a grand port city on Lake Ontario that the world would envy.

    • @hariunnithan9
      @hariunnithan9 Год назад

      The Coxsackie virus…..

    • @karphin1
      @karphin1 Год назад

      Interestingly enough, there are a group of viruses know as Coxsackie viruses, and they include polio varieties.

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss 10 месяцев назад +1

      The Dutch place names of the Hudson Valley create all manner of weirdness and weird pronunciations. "Fishkill" named after the Fishkill Creek. But "kill" is an old Dutch word for "creek". So, "Fish Creek Creek." And then there's "Valatie", which is pronounced something like, "Valayshia".

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Год назад +14

    In Pennsylvania, they have both Intercourse and Blue Ball, which are right by each other! Blue Ball was named after the Blue Ball Hotel, built more than two hundred years ago, which was torn down in 1997. In the early 18th century, John Wallace built a small building in Earl Town (the place's original name) and hung a blue ball out front from a post and called it "The Sign of the Blue Ball". Thus, the locals started calling the town that.
    Intercourse on the other hand was formerly known as Cross Keys, named after a local tavern. Intercourse became the name in 1814. How? Well there is no clear story but there are a couple theories. One suggests it is derived from a sign at an old racecourse on the edge of town which said "Enter course". Another says it's for two big roads that crossed there. The Old King's highway from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh (now the Old Philadelphia Pike) ran east and west through the center of the town. The road from Wilmington to Erie intersected in the middle. The joining of these two roads is claimed by some to be the basis for the town.

    • @randymack2222
      @randymack2222 Год назад +1

      The best part of the story is it's also in Amish country, go figure...

  • @kenlyneham4105
    @kenlyneham4105 Год назад +21

    Australia has its own set of weird, if not wonderful place names.
    There are too many to list but these, need special mention.
    Come By Chance, Wee Waa, Useless Loop, Running Jump Creek, Scented knob, Chinamans knob, Bong Bong, Greg Greg, Big Dick Bore, Linger and die Creek and the longest name in Australia, Mamungkukumpurangkuntjunya Hill in South Australia. It's a word from the local Pitjantjatjara language that means, “where the devil urinates”.

    • @neilward9932
      @neilward9932 11 месяцев назад +6

      also Tittybong, Yorkys Knob, East Intercourse Island

    • @ecphorizer
      @ecphorizer 10 месяцев назад +2

      I was sent to Sydney to do penance at IBM. I worked with a fellah named Buddy, whose wife was named Dee. One saturday they took me on a drive and passed a sign pointing to DEE WHY. I asked Buddy if that's what he says to his wife when she wants him to do a job or two adound the house.

    • @Patricia-zq5ug
      @Patricia-zq5ug 8 месяцев назад

      Newfoundland, Canada, also has Come By Chance.

    • @IanKemp1960
      @IanKemp1960 7 месяцев назад +1

      Mount Sheila, Cockburn, Iron Knob, Boobs Flat, Fannie Bay, Mt. Nameless, Bald Knob, Prominent Knob, this could go on all day.... 🙂

  • @meajur
    @meajur Год назад +4

    Where I live, there are these two streets that used to be named "This Street" and "That Street". My dad almost lost his job for telling his boss that he was "at the corner of This Street and That Street". Boss got mad, yelled at dad over the radio, and jumped in his truck. When he got there, there was dad leaning on the street sign at the intersection of This Street and That Street. Sadly, the streets have since been renamed.
    What town, you ask? It's a town called Pinetop-Lakeside. The Lakeside part is obvious (it was started on the side of a lake). The Pinetop part... you'd THINK it was named after the local pine trees but nope. It was named after a red headed bartender. But even if where the name came from isn't intuitive, it's not weird enough to end up on a "weird place name list" like neighboring Show Low does (named after the winning hand in a card game). But Show Low's got nothing on Why, which was named after... no, not a question... a fork in the road.

  • @RafaelSCalsaverini
    @RafaelSCalsaverini Год назад +10

    Definitely do more!!
    In Brazil we have a few cities with funny names: "Não-Me-Toque" (literally "do not touch me"), "Venha Ver" ("come and see"), "Passa e Fica" ("pass it by and stay"), "Paudalho" ("garlic stick", but in Brazilian slang it could be "garlic penis"), "Carrasco Bonito" ("pretty executioner").

    • @allejandrodavid5222
      @allejandrodavid5222 Год назад

      Ponta Grossa
      Pintópolis
      Coité-do-Nóia
      Anta Gorda
      😂😂😂😂

  • @cynicaldodgyknees6248
    @cynicaldodgyknees6248 Год назад +8

    Another great video, Rob, and thanks for taking the time to amuse us. There does, however, appear to be a glaring omission! Where was Twatt, in Orkney? 😲

  • @cbjones2212
    @cbjones2212 Год назад +15

    Here in Australia there are loads of odd place names. Two that spring to mind without me thinking too hard are Worlds End and Goodnight. There's also Colignan, not an odd name per se, but the town of Nangiloc (which is Colignan backwards) is about 6 miles away as the crow flies.
    Yeah, no body part inferences in those ones, sorry

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 Год назад +1

      There's Lake Disappointment as well.

    • @MaryAnnNytowl
      @MaryAnnNytowl Год назад +2

      We have a Goodnight in Missouri, USA, too! There's a mountain of weird names here. I could list about 40, and not even scratch the surface. Like Pilot Knob, Knob Noster, Knob Lick, Licking, and Toad Hollow, to name a few. 😂

  • @sanniepstein4835
    @sanniepstein4835 5 месяцев назад +4

    In Quebec, there was a govt minister named Lise Bacon (French). After one kerfuffle, the anglo newspaper's headline was "Bacon Sizzles". They couldn't resist, who could? but she was furious.

    • @GoodieWhiteHat
      @GoodieWhiteHat 4 месяца назад

      Aww! In Tasmania 1998-2004 we had a state premier called Jim Bacon. His wife’s name was Honey. His name was often used in lines like that

  • @Ribeirasacra
    @Ribeirasacra Год назад +13

    I live in a wine producing area of Spain- Ribeira Sacra (hence my channel name) There is a village called Sober. it is produced slightly differently in Spanish to English. But still it is worth a photo opportunity.

    • @BillGreenAZ
      @BillGreenAZ Год назад +1

      I think I'll take that photo opportunity if I ever stop drinking.

  • @msclrhd
    @msclrhd Год назад +27

    It may be interesting to do a video on spam/game/etc. filters with the Scunthorpe problem and the related buttbuttin problem. The second one is due to replacing rude words with less rude ones in game chat/etc. for hilarity when playing as an assassin.

    • @Zachyshows
      @Zachyshows Год назад

      I once saw someone who's name was Nasser, but the censorship made their name N***er with the asterisks

    • @masterimbecile
      @masterimbecile Год назад

      And Penistone

    • @simontay4851
      @simontay4851 Год назад +2

      Spam spam spam.... Lovely spam...

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +3

      It’s also called the clbuttic (classic) problem.

  • @PhilBagels
    @PhilBagels Год назад +8

    I remember reading about town names in the US that were named during the western expansion through the 1800's and later had their names changed by official government rules, because the names were found to be unacceptable. I only remember a few of them: Bullshit Springs was changed to Bullshirt Springs (which isn't much of an improvement), and Whorehouse Meadows was changed to Naughty Girl Meadows.
    I also heard that Nome, Alaska was named by mistake. As sailors were charting out the Alaskan coast, they saw the settlement and didn't know what its name was, so someone wrote "Name?" on the map, and the person's handwriting was misread as "Nome".
    After mentioning Llanfair..., I'm surprised you didn't mention Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg, commonly known as "Lake Gog". The name comes from an old native land treaty between two tribes, and means, "We fish on our side, you fish on your side, nobody fishes in the middle."
    Zzyzx Road is usually pronounced to rhyme with "physics". I've driven past it many times. It's off of Interstate 15, that goes from Los Angeles to Las Vegas. Everyone who's ever driven to Vegas from southern California has seen the Zzyzx Road sign.

    • @PhilBagels
      @PhilBagels Год назад

      And I also learned about a place called Just Enough Room Island - the smallest inhabited island in the world. 3300 square feet, or about 1/13 of an acre. Originally called "Hub Island", someone bought it, and built his house on it. I suppose he has the right to rename it, if he owns it. One house, one tree, a few shrubs, a little bit of beach.

    • @w.reidripley1968
      @w.reidripley1968 Год назад

      Zye-zix may also be accepted.

    • @PhilBagels
      @PhilBagels Год назад

      @@w.reidripley1968 Yes. Apparently, that's what the guy who came up with the name intended. It doesn't follow the usual rules of pronunciation. Not having a second vowel, there's nothing to indicate a long vowel sound, and therefore a short vowel sound would usually be indicated. For example "gym" and "rhythm" as opposed to "lyre" and "xylophone".

  • @johnledingham852
    @johnledingham852 5 месяцев назад +1

    Yes more funny names videos, please. I'm sure there's and abundance of sources for you to wade through. We have a street here in Brisbane,
    Australia called Whynot Street. I'd love to have been eavesdropping when that name was discussed.

  • @johnhoward2402
    @johnhoward2402 Год назад +6

    Thanks for making me smile Rob. It would be churlish if I said I was disappointed there was no mention of Twatt.

    • @ottergod
      @ottergod Год назад

      Exactly! I came here to mention that too. I was thinking of the Twatt in Shetland, but there's also one in Orkney.

    • @kittyjohnstone5915
      @kittyjohnstone5915 8 месяцев назад

      And I came on to mention them too!

  • @ChaosPootato
    @ChaosPootato Год назад +6

    I absolutely love that Dull paired with Boring

  • @ElaineWood-f2t
    @ElaineWood-f2t Год назад +7

    My native state of North Carolina, USA, has a few oddly named towns. There's Lizard Lick, Whynot, and Scotland Neck. A couple of mildly suggestive places are Apex and Climax. There's also Cumnock. I'm sure the stories behind some of these odd names would be interesting. I really enjoy your videos!!! Greetings from Virginia, USA.

    • @OcaRebecca
      @OcaRebecca Год назад +2

      I was going to mention Whynot, but you beat me. North Carolina also has Bat Cave.

    • @BillGreenAZ
      @BillGreenAZ Год назад +1

      @@topherthe11th23 I would like to see it become a sibling city to French Lick, Indiana, home of the American basketball player Larry Bird.

    • @angiebee2225
      @angiebee2225 10 месяцев назад

      We used to have to drive through Horneytown to get to my parents' house in North Carolina.

  • @prettypic444
    @prettypic444 25 дней назад +2

    fun fact: the founder of Zzyzx was a radio preacher who called himself "the last of the medicine men". he used the town to run an 'alternative' health spa which featured a cross shaped pool. the federal government later convicted him for fraud, and the land is now owned by the California State University system.

  • @129140163
    @129140163 Год назад +6

    In addition to Nameless (which I didn’t know about despite living in Tennessee my entire life), we also have:
    Sweet Lips
    Finger
    Three Way
    Dancyville
    Blue Goose
    Goat City
    Friendship
    not one but TWO places called Frog Jump (like the two “Twatts” mentioned by some other commenters)
    Hicksville
    Only
    Bucksnort
    Stinking Creek
    Wartburg
    Nankipoo
    Bugtussle

  • @tomw2131
    @tomw2131 Год назад +8

    Surprised you didn’t cover the German-Austrian cycle ride from Kissing-München-Petting-Titmoning and on to the town that’s now called Fugging (as the locals got fed up replacing the sign containing “ck”)! 😂

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 Год назад

      They changed the name? I wondered why he didn’t mention it!

    • @tristantheoofer2
      @tristantheoofer2 Год назад

      WAIT THERES A TOWN CALLED FUCKING???? LOL HOW????

  • @MichaelTheLibertarian
    @MichaelTheLibertarian Год назад +21

    More, more, more, please!
    I'm originally from New York City and a linguist. I've lived near some strangely named places. Right now, I live in Pennsylvania which contains "Blue Ball". That town is not too terribly far away from "Intercourse".
    Unfortunately, as you alluded to in this video, "the colonies" are rife with odd place names. There's a "Reader's Digest, New York". There's also one in New Mexico. I know the stories surrounding both of those and I'll go into detail, if you like, but I hate typing. So, I'll end this for now.
    Keep up the good work, Rob. I find most of your videos to be extremely entertaining.

  • @florencehall005
    @florencehall005 5 месяцев назад +1

    Very close to where I live in Southland, New Zealand there is a charming rural settlement called Mabel’s Bush. I have to admit I giggle whenever I drive past the sign.

  • @romanmichaelhamilton8729
    @romanmichaelhamilton8729 Год назад +7

    Please do more of these Rob as you truly outdid yourself on this one. Superb job. :-) This is good and near Benny Hill level entertainment. :-) RIP Mr. Hill.

  • @HayTatsuko
    @HayTatsuko Год назад +6

    What a treat to join this tour of offbeat names! I'd live to see more, for sure!

  • @teedoification
    @teedoification Год назад +10

    Love your videos - I grew up near Nasty in Puckeridge, so was a shock watching the video to see my childhood village come up (the meaning of which I'm told is Fairy under the Bridge).
    Saw two other villages with interesting pronunciations and possibly etymologies near Nasty - Braughing (pronounced Braffing), and Haultwick (pronounced Artic) - is this something you could shed light on, or is there a resource I can look up to find the origins?

  • @gammaphonic
    @gammaphonic Год назад +3

    Muff in Northern Ireland is situated on a natural harbour. They have a diving club. Literally, the Muff diving club.

    • @GingerLeftyGuitar
      @GingerLeftyGuitar 4 месяца назад

      Sorry, but I need to correct both Rob and yourself. Muff is not in Northern Ireland as you said. It is in Ulster. Co Donegal and part of the Republic of Ireland, and very not British.

  • @FAIZAFEI
    @FAIZAFEI Год назад +8

    There's a lot of funny place name in Japanese for us Mandarin speakers, since Japanese Kanji and Chinese Hanzi has tons of linguistic false friend, ranging from slightly weird to nonsense. One of the more famous one, is a place in near Tokyo call Abiko 我孫子 it's just a normal place name in Japanese but it mean 'my grandson' in Mandarin, apparently we also got omachi machi 大町町 it mean 'big town' town in both language, But, in Mandarin the character 町 has the same pronunciation as 丁 and make the name sound like 大丁丁 which is one of the way of implying big PP.

  • @verylostdoommarauder
    @verylostdoommarauder Год назад +9

    The Zzyzx Road thing is more interesting. The guy who made up the name was a snake oil salesman who set up this mineral bath center at the end of the road. It's now abandoned.

  • @BorisMinor
    @BorisMinor Год назад +6

    Australia has it's fair share of these too, but Burpengary is one that always makes me laugh. DO MORE PLEASE!

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +1

      There’s also the town in Australia with a racial slur.

    • @BorisMinor
      @BorisMinor Год назад +1

      @@ferretyluv and lots of Knobs for some reason...

  • @shaannun
    @shaannun 8 месяцев назад +1

    So many to choose from here in Canada but just a few are Climax, Wawa, Snowball, and Sparkle City where I used to live.

  • @sebastianweigand
    @sebastianweigand Год назад +9

    Fantastic content, high production value. Great job Rob!

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +2

      Thanks a lot, Sebastian! And thanks for watching.

    • @sebastianweigand
      @sebastianweigand Год назад +3

      @@RobWords "The settlement with the excrement..." 🤣 Still laughing!

  • @98olober
    @98olober Год назад +13

    Actually, Å wouldn't come before Aa if you are using the Dano-Norwegian alphabet (or the Swedish). Å is its own letter, and happens to be the very last in the Dano-Norwegian alphabet, that is the 29th letter. This is different from how umlauts appear in German for example, where Ä is just a variant of A and is sorted as such in the dictionary.

    • @Krydolph
      @Krydolph Год назад

      True! At the same time though, you would pronounce Aa as Å, since its the same, we have the Å because we used double A so much, and pronounced it different so it made sense to make a letter for it.. (Or at least I assume so, AA and Å is the same phonetically in Danish, and if you are stuck with a non danish keyboard, it is the way you would write Å)

  • @Cameron4077
    @Cameron4077 Год назад +4

    Here in Manitoba Canada we have Flin Flon. It was named after the character Josiah Flintabbatey Flonatin from the novel The sunless city. There is also a city in Ontario called Kenora. Originally it was called Rat Portage, but was renamed Kenora by using the first two letters of itself and the nearby towns of Keewatin and Norman.😄

  • @claudinedecarlisle8647
    @claudinedecarlisle8647 8 месяцев назад +1

    Your quick comment during your NordVPN ad resulted in me spitting my morning coffee across the table. Well done sir!

  • @jshood3353
    @jshood3353 Год назад +5

    You really should review Jug Tavern and Marthasville, Georgia. Both places changed their names to Winder and Atlanta.

  • @somedude6161
    @somedude6161 Год назад +16

    You could probably do a whole episode just on all of the interesting place names in Newfoundland.

    • @somethingelsehere8089
      @somethingelsehere8089 Год назад

      I was thinking the same!

    • @somedude6161
      @somedude6161 Год назад

      @@somethingelsehere8089 great minds think alike (fools seldom differ) 😉

    • @impunitythebagpuss
      @impunitythebagpuss Год назад

      Too true! Lol! Newfie here!

    • @AlyraMoondancer
      @AlyraMoondancer Год назад

      Oh, yes, please! I spent two wonderful summer vacations in Newfoundland with my family as a child, and I absolutely loved it!

    • @somedude6161
      @somedude6161 Год назад

      Okay @robwords, looks like you need to take a trip to Newfoundland and parse the entomology of their unique way of speaking. Have some screech while you're there

  • @fuferito
    @fuferito Год назад +5

    I'm a few seconds in, and stopped to predict if Chinaman's Knob will feature in this video; placename to, not one nor two, but to _three_ different locations in Australia.

  • @masterpointstrategies3413
    @masterpointstrategies3413 8 месяцев назад +1

    Entertaining and educational as always. My favorite place name is "Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump" in Canada.

  • @pimpozza
    @pimpozza Год назад +9

    I just can't stop laughing! And your delivery is spot on, Rob! Some of those "Bottoms" were totally new to me.. 🤦🏻‍♀️ At least Dull is now twinned with Boring and Bland! 🤣
    If I still lived in the UK I'd be laughing over my fish 'n' chips.. (I miss them too! 😂)
    Thanks for a brilliant vid.. 👏

    • @valivali8104
      @valivali8104 Год назад +3

      They may be Dull, Boring and Bland but at least they have sense of humor 😂

    • @pimpozza
      @pimpozza Год назад +1

      @@valivali8104 True!! 🤣🤣

    • @valivali8104
      @valivali8104 Год назад

      @@pimpozza 😳😊

    • @LukasSchratz
      @LukasSchratz Год назад +1

      Dull, boring and bland should be twinned with some of austrian places called "Oed" (which means kind of boring, originally an expression for a barren or deserted area)

  • @jenjibur
    @jenjibur Год назад +8

    Hilarious! There are way more weird place names than I thought. I was hoping my home state of Indiana would make the list with French Lick.

  • @Liggliluff
    @Liggliluff Год назад +6

    (0:50) There's also Å in Sweden. But worth pointing out that Å is sorted after Z in the alphabet.