Made-Up Station Names DB

cam123456789

Trainz Spotter
Hello everyone!

This forum is basically a list of made up station names. Please feel free to post some names. Hopefully this will become really useful for those making routes.

Here are some examples:

Bridge gate
Serryton
Plotingham

Thank you for looking

Boyercam :)
 
I usually use real place names but an exception is:

One city on my route is named "Port Asbestos" - a fictional city somewhere in Canada often referred to in the Canadian TV comedy show "The Red Green Show" (also seen in the USA on PBS).

Now we need some content creator to create "Possum Lodge"
 
There are scores of fictitous names used in TV programmes and most of them sound plausible. I find them a good source - even if limited to crime dramas (in the UK).

Ray
 
There are scores of fictitous names used in TV programmes and most of them sound plausible. I find them a good source - even if limited to crime dramas (in the UK).

Ray
Reading your post jogged my memory I found another station (no pun intended) called Denton on the same route as my previous post. This is the town where Inspector Jack Frost of Denton CID Lives and works. "ATouch Of Frost" (David Jason)
 
G' Day,

I often use the names of my girlftiends, and just ad "vile", "stadt", etc to them.

Have a good one,
E.C.
 
Reading your post jogged my memory I found another station (no pun intended) called Denton on the same route as my previous post. This is the town where Inspector Jack Frost of Denton CID Lives and works. "ATouch Of Frost" (David Jason)

Colourlight - coincidence - this is one of the first names I used! Also Hartley, Wetherton, - and of course the marvellous names from Midsomer County - one could build a huge layout just using those!

(Apologies to enthusiasts who do not live in the UK - but similar local names must be available.)

Ray
 
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For fictional routes located in the UK, try this:

A British town name generator:

http://www.generatorland.com/glgenerator.aspx?id=49

I will let our British forum members comment on whether the results are often offensive and stupid, and in any case too long to fit on a platform sign.

go to their home page and you will get access to other name generators as well (few if any are of any value in Trainz). But there are other place name generators on the web, just google for them.

A comment to Satyr (post #7) - I hope you meant adding "ville" to an girlfriend's name, not "vile" as spelled in your post.
 
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Re the British town name generator:

I had a look at half-a-dozen or so and find that they are in no way realistic. They are not offensive, just silly (in my opinion) and do not reflect the way in which town and village names have developed - which is something I have studied in the past. They remind me of the unlikely/silly names used by some model railway builders - perhaps that's where they came from!

If anyone's interested (!) I could describe a name generator - on paper - devised years ago by my wife.

Ray
 
Just play with some real names, especially those with multiple words -

e.g. Isle of Dogs - change for Much Barking

Wibleigh for Wobley...

We have such a rich mine of place-names in the UK - just pick a real one. There is so much choice of genuine yet somehow amusing-sounding ones such as

Whitchurch Canonicorum
Piddletrenthide
Wenden's Ambo
and, of course, Nempnett Thrubwell.


:)
 
Well come on then Ray, don't leave us hanging, let's hear about it.

OK, Deano5, but it will have to be tomorrow! I just need to find the bit of paper, if possible - otherwise I'll do it from memory!

Ray
 
Re: the Random Place Name Generator.

My memory was at fault - this was not on paper and I have been reminded that it was an early essay by my wife into computer programming in 1980 using our first computer - a Tandy TRS80 with 16K RAM (no, I have not made a mistake!), no programs, storage on cassette tape and a dot matrix printer.

The generator was based on the fact that many one-word names can be split into two parts. The first part might be the name of a crop, plant or tree: alder, ash, ban, bar; the second of some geographical feature: ford, hill, ham - giving the place names Alderford, Ashill, Banham, Barford. The 'roots' go back many hundreds of years, to Celtic, Roman or Saxon times, and can be difficult to interpret. This does not matter - Ban and Bar can still be used without knowing that they derive from bean and barley.

Two lists were built up from a book giving over 600 place names in Norfolk, England. The computer program then randomly selected one name from each list and combined them. If the combination had already been chosen, it was not repeated. From the examples above this could have given Alderhill, Ashford, Barhill, Banford etc. Some combinations seemed realistic, those that did not could be rejected - this is a dependent on the user's perception.

As a further stage, variety could be created by using prefixes such as Great, Little, West, North; or suffixes like Market, Thorpe, Magna, Parva. Another possibility is to remember that after the Norman Conquest of 1066, the new overlords added their family names to traditional place names, ending up with examples such as Ashill Melville, Banham Beaufort, etc. The possuibilities are almost endless.

A lot depends on the area in which one's fictitious place is depicted as certain areas of the UK have particular name elements. For instance,there are very few names in Norfolk which contain Celtic elements - aber, coombe, pen. However, there are some Roman elements - caster, Strat - and many Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian, as this is where those people settled.

It would have been possible to do the same thing uses sets of cards; and paradoxically in my opinion it was easier to do with a very simple computer in which everything had to be done in BASIC. Computer programming experts may disagree ...

Ray
 
Thanks All

Thank you everyone for your thoughts.

I had a look at the british town genarator and I don't find them offencive they are very long though!

If you have any other names please feel free to post more!

Boyercam
 
schweitzerdude;83 A comment to Satyr (post #7) - I hope you meant adding "ville" to an girlfriend's name said:
G'day,

Yes, I meant "ville" although some of them correspond more to the other way of spelling:hehe:.

Have a good one,
E.C.
 
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