Well I never. I challenge you to find another location name of the same origins. You know you want to.
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As I sometimes watch German Freesat TV I just looked up if the PSG v Bayern game is being shown on a free-to-air channel.
The German website I visited in order to find out stated that the game is available free of charge on an Italian channel and internet site but I noticed that the game is listed in Italian as 'PSG v Monaco' - and I wondered if it was a typo.
On further investigation it transpires that both Munich and Monaco are known in Italian as Monaco.
München and Monaco mean the same thing i.e. a place for monks*.
Munich was actually the former German name for München, by the way.
All the above names for Munich/Monaco come from Ancient Greek: (Mono = one or solitary, ikos = house) - presumably a house for those who spend time contemplating alone.
Such things fascinate me but bore other people to tears - and I look forward to this post dropping to page 2 before I wash my habit.....
Yours
Friar TBG
Well I never. I challenge you to find another location name of the same origins. You know you want to.
The most boring thing I ever read was an edition of Drilling Contractor.
Good lord, no. I have only manage about 14 legs so far - and as each leg is only about 7/8 miles long (as 5 friends join me and it's a social thing as much as a walk) and that most of the legs have been loops back to where the car has parked we have only reached Mortehoe near Woolacombe. We are doing another 3 legs next month (Fri, Sat & Sun on the same weekend), which will get us as far as Braunton. And we will do another 3 legs on a weekend in June etc. The excellent company has made it a huge pleasure, it has to be said.
I wonder if Bob Monkhouse ever changed his name when touring overseas?
It's much more interesting than some of the documents I have read, and, write for work
The most boring thing you will have read this week ( everything )
Mayonnaise was allegedly created for the first time in Mahon, a small town in Minorca where the French were battling the Spanish. The head chef of the Duke de Richelieu created it to make the local food taste better.
It’s origins are even more interesting if you consider that Mahon is named after Mago, a Carthaginian admiral, making ‘mayonnaise’ the only word in the English language to have a Punic etymology.
What would be the equivalent in English? Monkton?