Culture

Can you pronounce New Hampshire’s trickiest town name?

If you ever stumble over the pronunciation of a New Hampshire town name, you’re not alone. According to Mental Floss, the trickiest town to pronounce in the state is Milan, in Coös County. It’s pronounced MY-linn—not like the Italian city.

A view of the White Mountains the top of Mt. Monroe in New Hampshire. Brian Yurasits/Unsplash

A version of this story appeared in the Granite Post’s newsletter. Subscribe to it here.

 

If you ever stumble over the pronunciation of a New Hampshire town name, you’re not alone. According to Mental Floss, the trickiest town to pronounce in the state is Milan, in Coös County. It’s pronounced MY-linn—not like the Italian city.

The list comes from a study by language-learning site Preply, which identified the hardest towns to pronounce in each state. You can check out a map of all 50 states’ most challenging town names here.

Some of these names come from Native languages, others from French origins, and some are the result of early settlers blending two names together. Some are named after people, as is the case of Milan.

The town, with a population now of about 1,400 was originally called Paulsbourg in 1771, named for Paul Wentworth, a cousin of Gov. John Wentworth, according to this New Hampshire state website. In 1824, Gov. Levi Woodbury renamed it Milan after businessman Milan Harris, who established some of America’s first woolen mills in Harrisville. Harrisville, in Cheshire County, also happens to be named after Harris.

A few more town name highlights from around New England:

  • Vermont: Montpelier – mont-PEEL-yər

  • Massachusetts: Worcester – WOO-ster

  • Maine: Seboeis – Seh-BOW-iss

  • Connecticut: Berlin – BURR-lin

And the hardest of all? It could be Alaska’s Nunathloogagamiutbingoi Dunes. Even Mental Floss admits nobody really knows how to say it, but a rough approximation might be: Noo-nath-loo-ga-ga-mee-oot-bin-go-ee.

 

Keep Granite Post free for everyone

If you found this story useful, would you consider supporting Granite Post?

Every day, our team works to provide New Hampshirites with free, fact-based reporting about the issues, policies, and decisions shaping life across the state. We believe everyone deserves access to trustworthy local news—not just those who can afford a subscription.

That's why you'll never hit a paywall here (though we may ask you to sign up for our newsletter). But keeping our journalism free depends on readers who believe informed communities are worth investing in.

If our reporting has helped you better understand what's happening in New Hampshire, please consider making a donation today. Every contribution helps us continue reporting, informing, and serving communities across the state.

Colin Booth
Colin Booth Chief Political Correspondent
Support our team