Often, a given body of water will have several entirely different names given to it by different peoples living along its shores. For example, and are the
Tibetan and
Thai names, respectively, for the same river, the
Mekong in
southeast Asia. (The Tibetan name is used for
three other rivers as well.) Hydronyms from various languages may all share a common
etymology. For example, the
Danube,
Don,
Dniester,
Dnieper, and
Donets rivers all contain the
Scythian name for "river" (cf. , "river, water" in modern
Ossetic). A similar suggestion is that the
Yarden,
Yarkon, and
Yarmouk (and possibly, with distortion,
Yabbok and/or
Arnon) rivers in the
Israel/
Jordan area contain the
Egyptian word for river (, transliterated in the
Bible as ). It is also possible for a
toponym to become a hydronym: for example, the
River Liffey takes its name from the plain on which it stands, called or ; the river originally was called . An unusual example is the
River Cam, which originally was called the , but when the town of became
Cambridge, the river's name changed to match the toponym. Another unusual example is the
River Stort which is named after the town on the ford
Bishops Stortford rather than the town being named after the river. == Relation to history ==