Alaska has a lot of places with names that outsiders have a hard time deciphering. From the various Alaska native languages to the random names pioneers gave to towns, we have a lot of crazy town names that are serious tongue twisters. But after you read this article, you will sound like a local when you travel through Alaska. Practice these tongue twister town names and you will be ready for adventures this summer in Alaska.
This staggeringly beautiful island is foggy, but that has nothing to do with the Alutiiq name, an Alaska native language spoken in the region. The Afognak State Park is here and it is so beautiful, it's hard to leave.
On the plains between the Alaska Range and the Tanana River, this town name is derived from the Athabaskan word meaning "peaceful river." There have been Athabaskan Village sites in the area for hundreds, if not thousands, of years.
Anaktuvuk is the English way of spelling annaqtugvik which means "the place of caribou droppings" in Inupiaq. This arctic place is far up in the north, just above the Brooks Range.
Yupik people have lived in Napakiak since around 1000 A.D., and the name is from the Yupik language. There is also another village nearby called Napaskiak. so be sure to keep them straight.
This tiny spot in the Matanuska Valley has a population of 37 people. According to the Alaska Fish & Wildlife News, "Skwentna" is from the Shqitnu language meaning something akin to "Sloping Ridge River."
The village was reportedly named for the Chickaloon River, after Chief Chiklu. The Alaska Native people of Chickaloon are a mixture of Ahtna and Dena'ina Athabaskan and the locals refer to the place as Nay’dini’aa Na, another tongue twister.
This one is often mispronounced, but the "nana" is the same as in "banana," with a long "nee" at the beginning. The river and the town lie in the interior, north of Denali National Park and south of Fairbanks.
The village, the people of the area, and their language are all called Tanana, which does not rhyme with "Nenana." Tanana is located at the confluence of the Tanana River and the Yukon River.
The name of this village is an adaptation of the Iñupiaq word "Una-la-thliq," which means "from the southern side." This tiny town on the edge of the Bering Sea is a wild place where the people subsist on the wild food form the Bering Sea and the caribou that graze through Western Alaska.
Learn more information about Alaska Native place names here.