Foulness

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Two places in Britain are called identically Foulness, but thedy a\re pronounced differently, ddenote different geographical fea\tures, and have different etymologies.

  • The river Foulness, which runs roughly north-south and enters the Humber estuary, via the Market Weighton canal, at Brough, is pronounced 'FOOl-nay' (IPA: /ˈful neɪ/), with the '-l-' more or less suppressed. It takes its name - and pronunciation - from its Old English root fÅ«le[n] Ä“a, 'dirty water', probably from the staining caused in it by the rust from iron deposits.
  • The island of Foulness in Essex, on the Thames estuary, is pronounced like the common noun foulness, but with the stress on the second rather than the first syllable: the island is 'foul-NESS', /faÊŠl ˈnÉ›s/; the common noun 'FOUL-ness', /ˈfaÊŠl nÉ›s/. The name of the island was fughelnesse in Old English, 'headland of fowls [= birds]'.
    • The common noun is simply 'the state of being foul', or 'dirtiness'.