Massachusettsian

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (US) IPA(key): /mæsəˈt͡ʃusɛtsi.ən/

Noun[edit]

Massachusettsian (plural Massachusettsians)

  1. (dated) A native or resident of Massachusetts.
    • 1802 [1962], John Adams, edited by L.H. Butterfield, Diary and Autobiography of John Adams, volume 3, Cambridge, Massachusetts, page 336:
      That he was a Virginian and I a Massachusettsian.
    • 1869 January, Mayne Reid, “Trifles”, in Onward[1], G.W. Carleton, page 82:
      A young Massachusettsian (is this correct orthography?), by name Nathaniel II. Bishop, a mere lad of seventeen, who, prompted by a love of nature, starts off from his New England home, reaches the La Plata River, and coolly "walks" to Valparaiso, across pampa and cordillera, a distance of more than a thousand miles !
    • 1916, Charles Villiers Stanford, A History of Music, The Macmillan Company, page 324:
      Chadwick (54), though a Massachusettsian by birth, residence, and position is not so by preordination. He has a directness of thought, a humour, and a power of seeing himself as others see him that smack more of London or Paris than of Boston.
    • 1997, Maggie Montesinos Sale, The Slumbering Volcano: American Slave Ship Revolts and the Production of Rebellious Masculinity, Duke University Press, →ISBN, page 131:
      Much to the chagrin of many a Massachusettsian, on January 29, 1 842, Secretary of State Daniel Webster dispatched directions to the US ambassador to Great Britain in support of Calhoun's resolutions.
    • 2003, John P. Diggins, John Adams, Macmillan, →ISBN, pages 42–3:
      The minor appointments were the Virginian Edmund Randolph as attorney general and the Massachusettsian Henry Knox as secretary of war.

Hypernyms[edit]

Adjective[edit]

Massachusettsian (comparative more Massachusettsian, superlative most Massachusettsian)

  1. Of or relating to Massachusetts.