The name
Chute Forest is first attested in the
Domesday Book of 1086, in the Latin phrase "silva que vocatur Cetum" ("the wood that is called
Cetum"). The name derives from the
Common Brittonic word that survives today in modern Welsh as ("woodland"). Spellings with an
e, along the lines of
Cet,
Cette,
Chet and
Chette dominate the record through the thirteenth century and reflect the usual borrowing of this Brittonic word into Old English. The spelling
Chute, first attested for the
village that takes its name from the forest in 1268 (as
Chuth’) and for the forest itself in 1283 (as
Chute), reflects dialectal variation in Old English, specifically the
West-Saxon sound-change known as
palatal diphthongisation. == History ==