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  2. The name is usually said to refer to the sleeve (French: la manche) shape of the Channel. Folk etymology has derived it from a Celtic word meaning 'channel' that is also the source of the name for the Minch in Scotland, [13] but this name is not attested before the 17th century, and French and British sources of that time are clear about its ...

  3. 2 days ago · Earlier names had included Oceanus Britannicus and the British Sea, and the French have regularly used La Manche (in reference to the sleevelike coastal outline) since the early 17th century. Physical features

  4. Mar 5, 2021 · The French refer to the Channel as “la Manche” because of its sleevelike shape. Where Is The English Channel? English Channel. The English Channel is located between the Isle of Great Britain ’s southern coast and France’s northern coast and separated from the North Sea on the north by the Strait of Dover.

    • John Misachi
    • Why is the English Channel called La Manche?1
    • Why is the English Channel called La Manche?2
    • Why is the English Channel called La Manche?3
    • Why is the English Channel called La Manche?4
  5. The French name, La Manche (“The Sleeve”), is a reference to its shape, which gradually narrows from about 112 mi (180 km) in the west to only 21 mi (34 km) in the east, between Dover, Eng., and Calais, France.

  6. 04 Sep 2015. Guest blog by one of our research interns, Caroline Marris, a doctoral student at Columbia University in New York. Chart by Lucas Jansz Wagenaer (1584) (G223:2/5) When exactly did the English Channel start to be called the English Channel? It’s a question with a more complicated answer than you might think.

  7. Feb 6, 2016 · For much of its 50 million year history, the English Channel—or La Manche if you are looking from the French side—would have looked less like the ocean and more like a shallow valley with...

  8. In official Jersey Standard French, the Channel Islands are called 'Îles de la Manche', while in France, the term 'Îles Anglo-normandes' (Anglo-Norman Isles) is used to refer to the British 'Channel Islands' in contrast to other islands in the Channel.

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