Dale (landform)


A dale is an open valley. Dale is a synonym to the word valley. The name is used when describing the physical geography of an area. It is used most frequently in the Lowlands of Scotland and in the North of England; the term "fell" commonly refers to the mountains or hills that flank the dale.
The word dale comes from the Old English word dael, from which the word "dell" is also derived. It is also related to Old Norse word dalr, which may perhaps have influenced its survival in northern England. The Germanic origin is assumed to be *dala-. Dal- in various combinations is common in placenames in Norway. Modern English valley and French vallee are presumably not related to dale. A distant relative of dale is currency unit dollar, stemming from German thaler or daler, short for joachimsthaler coins manufactured in the town of Joachimsthal in Bohemia.
The word is perhaps related to Welsh dol, Russian dol and Serbian/Croatian/Bulgarian dolina. There is semantic equivalency to many words and phrases, suggesting a common Indo-European affinity. Vale and thalweg are also related.
Word/phraseLanguage
dalDutch
Tal, DelleGerman
dalNorwegian/Swedish/Danish
даліна Belarusian
долина Serbian/Croatian/Bulgarian
vale, dolinăRomanian
dolec, dolekSlovenian
dalenSwedish
údolí, důlCzech
dolinaPolish
údolie, dolinaSlovak
دره Persian

Examples of dales

The following are several examples of major dales that have the name dale. The river name is usually appended with "-dale". There are also many smaller dales; this is not an exhaustive list.