Hill-hill-hill Hill
Torpenhow Hill, a place in England, is famously a quadruple tautology: “Tor,” “pen,” and “how,” all mean “hill” in different languages, so “Torpenhow Hill” essentially translates to “Hill-hill-hill Hill.”
Each new group of settlers felt compelled to rename the place in their own tongue, and each of them drew inspiration from it looking like a hump. Cultures that passed through the region added their own word for “hill”: tor from Old English, pen from the Celtic, how from Norse, and finally hill from modern English.
So the next time you say “Torpenhow Hill,” you’ll also think “Hill-hill-hill Hill,” and you’re most welcome.


