Toponym in a sentence as a noun

Sorry to butt in but is your nickname by any chance a toponym?

“It rolls off the tongue,” he saidAnd there you have it, the exact same process that gave rise to all toponyms.

"Vyborgskaya" sounds like "station of Vyborg" and not a separate toponym.

By 1700, wolves had long been extirpated from the current UK, though their old territory is commemorated in the toponyms.

For example in the Romanian language, Gothic toponyms have been preserved to this day. Also the word "viteaz" which means courageous in Romanian is stemming from the word viking.

Also called Mostar Bridge, which since the city was named for the bridge-keepers, is a double and self-referential toponym: bridge-keeper-city bridge.

Relative to toponym: a few years ago I got bitten by an unidentified creature on the beach in Lombok and nearly died of asphyxiation due to a severe histamine reaction and the length of time it took to get to a hospital.

Sounds really interesting.> The book also goes into details on how the border of the Roman world still today predicts the richest regions of GermanyJust a couple of hours ago I was looking for a .kml or .geojson file of the Roman "limes", I was trying to prove its relationship to some toponymy-data from the Carpathians.

".The last sentence there struck me as unusual given what that implies: [2]"The medieval Persian toponym "Turkestan" and its derivatives were not used by the local population of the greater region, and China had its own name for an overlapping area since the Han Dynasty as Xiyu, with the parts controlled by China termed Xinjiang from the 18th century onward.

Toponym definitions

noun

the name by which a geographical place is known