Land (suffix)

(Redirected from -land)

The suffix -land, which can be found in the names of several countries or country subdivisions, indicates a toponymy - a land. The word derived from the Old English land, meaning "ground, soil", and "definite portion of the earth's surface, home region of a person or a people, territory marked by political boundaries". It evolved from the Proto-Germanic *landą and from the Proto-Indo-European *lendʰ- "land, open land, heath".[1]

Below is the list of places that ends with "-land" or "Lands".

Sovereign states edit

Common name:

Derived name:

Sub-national administrative divisions edit

Derived name:

Other places edit

Australia edit

Other places

Canada edit

Province level
County level
Town level

Denmark edit

Finland edit

(Names in Swedish/Names in Finnish)

Germany edit

The Netherlands edit

City level

New Zealand edit

Norway edit

Vestlandet Østlandet Sørlandet Trøndelag Nord-Norge

Sweden edit

Götaland Svealand Norrland

United Kingdom edit

Counties

Other places:

United States edit

Multi-state regions
Regions entirely in a single state
State level
City level
Village level

Other countries edit

Former place names edit

Thematic parks edit

Fictional places edit

From Peter Pan

From Alice in Wonderland

From Middle-Earth:

From Chronicles of Narnia

Other common names edit

References edit

  1. ^ Harper, Douglas. "land". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved July 18, 2021.

See also edit