List of New Zealand place name etymologies

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Template:Short description Template:Use New Zealand English Template:Use dmy dates Placenames in New Zealand derive largely from British and Māori origins. An overview of naming practices can be found at New Zealand place names.

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I

  • Inchbonnie – Scottish term that is descriptive of the scenery, inch meaning a small island.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>
  • Invercargill – A combination of inver a prefix for estuary and the surname of William Cargill, founder of Otago.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>
  • Iwikatea – Maori name for Balclutha, the name literally means 'bleached bones' and is a reference to a battle fought in the area.<ref name="balclutha"/>

K

  • Kaikohe – contraction of Māori {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} lit. 'to eat kohekohe', according to Piipi Tiopira after the sacking of a Māori village the survivors fled into the bush and survived on the berries of kohekohe trees.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>
  • Kaikōura – Contraction of Māori {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, meaning the fire where crayfish were cooked for Tamakiterangi.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>
  • King Country – district where the Māori King Movement led by King Tawhiao flourished in the 1860s.Template:Cn
  • Kirwee – named after Karwi, India, the site of a battle, by retired British Army colonel De Renzie Brett.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>

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  • Tasman Bay – in honour of Dutchman Abel Tasman, commander of first European ship to sight the country. <ref>Template:LINZ</ref>
  • Tauranga – Māori for 'sheltered anchorage'.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>
  • Te Waipounamu – Māori name of the South Island, meaning the greenstone water or 'the water of greenstone'. It may be an alteration of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, meaning the greenstone place.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>
  • Timaru – from Māori {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} lit. 'the shelter'.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>
  • Tiniroto – combination of Māori {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, the name was invented by a surveyvor and ignores the proper grammar of the language.<ref>Template:LINZ</ref>

W

Thomson's Barnyard

Many of the locations in the southern South Island of New Zealand, especially those in Central Otago and the Maniototo, were named by John Turnbull Thomson, who had surveyed the area in the late 1850s. Many of these placenames are of Northumbrian origin, as was Thomson himself.Template:Cn

There is a widespread, probably apocryphal, belief that the naming of many places was through a disagreement with the New Zealand surveying authorities. It has long been suggested that Thomson originally intended to give either classical or traditional Māori names to many places, but these names were refused. In response, Thomson gave prosaic Northumbrian names to them, often simply in the form of a Northumbrian dialectic name for an animal.<ref>Template:ReedPlacenames1975</ref>Template:Page needed The Maniototo region around the town of Ranfurly is rife with such names as Kyeburn, Gimmerburn, Hoggetburn, and Wedderburn as a result. Ranfurly itself was originally called "Eweburn". The area is still occasionally referred to as "Thomson's Barnyard" or the "Farmyard Patch".Template:Cn

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  • Land Information NZ (LINZ) An authoritative list of New Zealand placenames, used for NZ government maps, is available in various forms. The list does not cover their meanings.
  • NZ Geographic Board Nga Pou Taunaha Aotearoa – Free download of 55,000 New Zealand placenames. Note: Special care is required, for instance the geographic coordinates are NOT the centroid of the placename, they are the lower left corner of the original label scan from the 260 series maps (1:50 000 Topographic hard copy).
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