Dordogne

Etymology
From.

Proper noun

 * 1) A river that flows from south-central France into the Garonne.
 * 1) A river that flows from south-central France into the Garonne.

Translations

 * Arabic: دُورْدُونيي
 * Aragonese: Dordonya
 * Armenian:
 * Azerbaijani: Dordon
 * Basque: Dordoina
 * Belarusian: Дардонь
 * Breton: Dordogna
 * Bulgarian: Дордон
 * Catalan: Dordonya
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 多爾多涅
 * Chuvash: Дордонь
 * Danish: Dordogne
 * Franco-Provençal: Dordogne
 * French:
 * Galician: Dordoña
 * Georgian: დორდონი
 * Greek: Δορδόνη
 * Hindi: दोर्दोंग
 * Italian: Dordogna
 * Japanese: ドルドーニュ
 * Kazakh: Дордонь
 * Korean: ^도르도뉴주
 * Latin: Dordonia
 * Latvian: Dordoņa
 * Lithuanian: Dordonė
 * Lombard: Dordogne
 * Macedonian: Дордоња
 * Marathi: दोर्दोन्य
 * Occitan: Dordonha
 * Piedmontese: Dordogna
 * Portuguese: Dordonha
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: Дордоња
 * Roman: Dordonja
 * Slovene: Dordonja
 * Spanish: Dordoña
 * Tajik: Дордон
 * Thai: ดอร์ดอญ
 * Ukrainian: Дордонь
 * Venetian: Dordogna
 * West Frisian: Dordonje


 * French:
 * Italian: Dordogna
 * Marathi: दोर्दोन्य
 * Occitan: Dordonha
 * Spanish: Dordoña
 * West Frisian: Dordonje

Etymology
Named after the river Dordogne, from (named by ).

Folk etymology derives it from two mountain streams, Dor (shortened from   and dogne, from  (imitative) +, though this may have influenced the spelling.