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Why is there an a'postrophe?

Bert45

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Time of past OR future Camino
2003, 2014, 2016, 2016, 2018, 2019
Why do I see O'Cebreiro and O'Pedrouzo so often on the internet? It's bad enough to see "it's" when it should be "its", but where do so many people get the idea that there is an apostrophe in these Spanish town names?
 
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Why do I see O'Cebreiro and O'Pedrouzo so often on the internet?

I would guess it's because people don't realise that 'O' is the (masculine singular) definite article in Portuguese and Galician Spanish and assume it should be connected to the word that follows.
 
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I was trained as a Primary School teacher in the 60s. Shortly thereafter I noticed the escape of the apostrophe. It had somehow managed to insinuate itself into placards, signs, letters: you name it, they all had extraneous apostrophes . The slippery slope.
You have to choose your battles, and I gave up on that one long ago. Just try to i'g'n'o'r'e them. Pax.
 
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Brierley's popular guidebook, that's why. That's how many people learn the name of the location, see it again and again, and it sticks:

View attachment 53078

Source: 2015 edition
That has to be the explanation! Thank you! But notice that the name is given correctly where the height of the mountain is given. I bet he copied and pasted it. I don't have Brierley – did he get O Pedrouzo wrong, too?
 
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Did he get O Pedrouzo wrong, too?
No, it's just called Pedrouzo in my 2015 edition of Brierley. I've read that O Pedrouzo is the Galician name and Pedrouzo is the standard Spanish name.

Just like other languages, in the case of bilingual foreign locations, English often takes the name from a historically dominant language, so Pedrouzo is presumably correct in English. These rules are vague or non-existant for largely unknown places, and they are better known for places such as the town called A Coruña (Galician), La Coruña (Spanish), Corunna (English), and La Corogne (French).
 
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From a contemporary English Style Guide that is used by people who have been made aware of the political sensitivities of foreign geographical names in English:

Write Seville. Otherwise use native spellings, e.g. Córdoba, Irún. Use the Catalan names Girona and Lleida, and the Galician names A Coruña and Ourense, as these are now the official Spanish names for the cities and provinces also known as Gerona, Lerida, La Coruña and Orense (see Ley 2/1992, de 28 de febrero, por la que pasan a denominarse oficialmente Girona y Lleida las provincias de Gerona y Lérida and Ley 2/1998, de 3 de marzo, sobre el cambio de denominación de las provincias de La Coruña y Orense).
And early 20th century authors like Georgiana King and Walter Starkie referred to Cebrero, no i, no O and no apostrophe. 😊
 
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From a contemporary English Style Guide that is used by people who have been made aware of the political sensitivities of foreign geographical names in English:

Write Seville. Otherwise use native spellings, e.g. Córdoba, Irún. Use the Catalan names Girona and Lleida, and the Galician names A Coruña and Ourense, as these are now the official Spanish names for the cities and provinces also known as Gerona, Lerida, La Coruña and Orense (see Ley 2/1992, de 28 de febrero, por la que pasan a denominarse oficialmente Girona y Lleida las provincias de Gerona y Lérida and Ley 2/1998, de 3 de marzo, sobre el cambio de denominación de las provincias de La Coruña y Orense).
And early 20th century authors like Georgiana King and Walter Starkie referred to Cebrero, no i, no O and no apostrophe. 😊
In Franco's time the official name was El Cebrero and Piedrafita del Cebrero.
In relation to O'Something, 20 years ago most Galician restaurants were O'Pazo,O'Xeito, etc I think to seem more international.
 
It leads to a bigger question. Why do we change the names of foreign (big) cities? And why do they change the names of ours? For example: Rome, Florence, Venice, Dunkirk, Lyons and Londra, Londres, Edimburgo. It would be difficult (for us) if we kept to the local spelling of Beijing, though.
 
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Why do I see O'Cebreiro and O'Pedrouzo so often on the internet? It's bad enough to see "it's" when it should be "its", but where do so many people get the idea that there is an apostrophe in these Spanish town names?

Because it's the Camin'O de Santiag'O of course !!!

The its and it's errors are usually typos and auto-correct glitches -- though frustratingly they're also often straightforward mistakes 😩
 
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It leads to a bigger question. Why do we change the names of foreign (big) cities? And why do they change the names of ours? For example: Rome, Florence, Venice, Dunkirk, Lyons and Londra, Londres, Edimburgo. It would be difficult (for us) if we kept to the local spelling of Beijing, though.

Custom and historical usage. There is no rhyme or reason. In recent years, we have much strength of opinion suggesting that we use the local name (watch the sparks when one says Bombay rather than Mumbai) but this does get to be problematic when there is more than one version. Years ago I was stomping through the woods out of Markina (or perhaps I was gently gliding out of Marquina) when I was invited to join a party of workshopping drama teachers at a lunch at roadside asador-- when I told them that I would be stopping in San Sebastian, I was corrected quite firmly that it was Donostia. After some discussion they told me that I perhaps should call it Saint Sébastien if speaking French (our common language at the table) or Saint Sebastian in English, for using San Sebastian would suggest that I supported Castilian centralization, but nobody would understand me if used Donostia.
 
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After some discussion they told me that I perhaps should call it Saint Sébastien if speaking French (our common language at the table) or Saint Sebastian in English, for using San Sebastian would suggest that I supported Castilian centralization, but nobody would understand me if used Donostia.

That sounds very familiar. Back in 1990 on my first Camino there was very little official recognition of minority languages or provincial autonomy in Spain. Government was still very centralised and authoritarian. Road signs were almost all in Castellano without the Basque or Gallego equivalents which are common today. You could plot your position on the map fairly well from the graffiti on road signs: which language had been used in the hand-painted text replacing the Castellano words that had been obliterated, or by which part of "Castilla y Leon" had been blanked out :rolleyes:
 
That sounds very familiar. Back in 1990 on my first Camino there was very little official recognition of minority languages or provincial autonomy in Spain. Government was still very centralised and authoritarian. Road signs were almost all in Castellano without the Basque or Gallego equivalents which are common today. You could plot your position on the map fairly well from the graffiti on road signs: which language had been used in the hand-painted text replacing the Castellano words that had been obliterated, or by which part of "Castilla y Leon" had been blanked out :rolleyes:
The are still some hand painted corrections in the Galician language area of Leon: Veiga (Vega) de Valcarce, Perexe (Pereje).
And in Galicia by those who like more the previous name Cabañas (Cabanas).
 
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View attachment 53077

I was trained as a Primary School teacher in the 60s. Shortly thereafter I noticed the escape of the apostrophe. It had somehow managed to insinuate itself into placards, signs, letters: you name it, they all had extraneous apostrophes ...
Rather ironic that it's not spelled apostrophe's isn't it?
 

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