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Origins of the name
The name comes from the Old English liver, meaning thick or muddy, and pol, meaning a pool or creek, and is first recorded around 1190 as Liuerpul.[11][12] According to the Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, "The original reference was to a pool or tidal creek now filled up into which two streams drained".[12] The adjective Liverpudlian is first recorded in 1833.[12]
Other origins of the name have been suggested, including "elverpool", a reference to the large number of eels in the Mersey.[13] The name appeared in 1190 as "Liuerpul",[14] and the place appearing as Leyrpole, in a legal record of 1418, may refer to Liverpool.[15]