Shawaii
Shawaii t1_j6esj4j wrote
It's somewhat tied to whomever is making contact, mapping the area, etc. Sometimes they makes stuff up or just name it after the city (probably asked "what do you call this place?"
Germany comes from a town in Deutschland.
Taiwan was called Formosa until quite recently, named ilha Formosa (beautiful island) by Portugese explorers.
Japan calls itself Nippon or Nihon, but the Portugese learned of Japan from the Chinese who would pronounce the same written characters "cipangu" or the Malay who would say, "Japang".
In China, the US is called Mei Guo or "beautiful country".
England in Ying Guo, which sounds pretty close.
San Francisco is Jiu Jin Shan or "old gold mountain"
Shawaii t1_j5dp20g wrote
Reply to comment by AcrobaticSource3 in TIFU by getting stuck in the mountains of New Mexico by oldsoul334578
No, not really. NM is generally cooler than CA, AZ, and TX. The summer because it is at a much higher elevation. In Santa Fe, it seldom gets above 90 degrees F in the summer and it's a dry heat so your body cools itself well as long as you have plenty of water.
Shawaii t1_j5dia8n wrote
Reply to comment by oldsoul334578 in TIFU by getting stuck in the mountains of New Mexico by oldsoul334578
When gas was cheap and we didn't have maps on our phones yet, exploring back-roads was pretty exciting. Glad you made it out safely.
Shawaii t1_j5dgtoa wrote
I grew up exploring side-roads all over New Mexico. Much better idea in summer.
Shawaii t1_j6exlzl wrote
Reply to comment by AngryBlitzcrankMain in ELI5: How do they come up with names for countries in foreign languages? by bentobam
Thanks - I knew it was something like that.