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Section 1: The endonym/exonym divide
The naming process: Societal acceptance and the endonym definition (Paul Woodman, UK)
Towards a comprehensive view at the endonym/exonym divide (Peter Jordan, Austria)
Endonyms, exonyms and seas (Philip W. Matthews, New Zealand)
On some possibilities for a more exact definition of exonyms (Ojārs Bušs, Latvia)
Endonyms, exonyms and language boundaries: A clarification (Paul Woodman, UK)
Definition of ‘exonym’ in the context of the new list of Polish exonyms (Maciej Zych, Poland)
Nubian perceptions of exonyms and endonyms (Herman Bell, UK)
Numbers as geographical names in Nubia: Endonyms or exonyms? (Halīm Sabbār, UK)
Toponymic expression: Endonyms and exonyms in speech, writing and reading - Exonym analysis and usage (Paul Woodman, UK)
Section 2: Exonym analysis and usage
French exonyms for Polish toponyms (Małgorzata Mandola, Poland)
Trends in exonym use: Selected exonyms of the Hungarian language (Béla Pokoly, Hungary)
What is an endonym in Spain? (Maria Del Mar Batlle, Spain)
Polish exonyms for the Arab world: How they come and go; what appears to stay (Bogusław R. Zagórski, Poland)
Geographical feature importance as a criterion for exonym selection: Croatian examples (Ivana Crljenko, Croatia)
Names of European spatial features within the List of Czech Exonyms: Minority toponyms (Pavel Boháč, Czech Republic)
Section 3: Minority toponyms
Minority toponyms in Romania (Zsombor Bartos-Elekes , Romania)
Slovak names of settlements in Hungary (Mónika Mándoki, András Dutkó, Hungary)
Place names in minority languages in Poland: Endonyms, exonyms and an illustration from history (Ewa Wolnicz-Pawłowska, Maciej Zych, Poland)
Section 4: Endonyms, exonyms and an illustration from history
Toponymy in a landscape of aggression: Geographical names in National Socialist Germany (Paul Woodman, UK)