Huisduinen

Dutch

Etymology

First attested as husidina in 918-948. The toponym has been interpreted as Proto-Germanic *husid-inja- (β€œplace of refuge, secure location”), in turn derived from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kewH- (β€œto hide, to occlude”) and related to Gothic 𐌷𐌿𐌢𐌳 (huzd, β€œtreasure, hoard”), Old English hord (β€œhoard, treasure”) and Old Saxon hord (β€œhidden courtyard, treasure”). Alternative interpretations include Proto-Celtic *Kusidiniom (β€œsettlement of Kusidinios”) and Proto-Germanic *hus-idh-umnjΓ΄- (β€œplace of houses”). The toponym was later reinterpreted to a compound of huis (β€œhouse”) and the plural form of duin (β€œdune”).

Compare Heusden, Huizinge and Opheusden.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: Huis‧dui‧nen

Proper noun

Huisduinen n

  1. A village in Den Helder, Noord-Holland, Netherlands.

Derived terms

  • Huisduiner

References

  • van Berkel, Gerard, Samplonius, Kees (2018) β€œhuisduinen”, in Nederlandse plaatsnamen verklaardβ€Ž (in Dutch), Mijnbestseller.nl, β†’ISBN
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