Citations:astronym


 * 1995 — Qingxia Dai, "The variation of free morphemes in compound words in Jinghpo", published in Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, Volume 18.1, page 144
 * although the concept of this astronym may have been of foreign origin, the constellation was named with the local word.
 * 1999 — D. Kolev, A. Kaloyanov, V. Koleva, "Pleiades in the Bulgarian folk culture", published in Actes de la Vème conférence annuelle de la SEAC: Gdańsk 1997, page 191
 * The Bulgarian tradition attributes the Pleiades astronym "Haidouks" mainly to the Big Dipper, whose most popular folk name is "the Wain"
 * 2013 — David W. Pankenier, Astrology and Cosmology in Early China, pages 186-188
 * it also occurs as a “clan sign,” which may have possessed a kind of heraldic significance (Figure 5.8c) in addition to being an astronym and possibly a toponym.
 * 2017 — M.G. Boutet, Celtic Astrology from the Druids to the Middle Ages, page 49
 * However, if some of the astronyms found in Cormac's Glossary are truly Gaelic, many of these names are Latin borrowings.