Boca Raton
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Bocaratone, from Boca Ratone Lagoon, from Spanish Boca de Ratones, from boca+ratone. Though named after Boca de Ratones, that region is actually in Biscayne Bay in Miami-Dade County, Florida, USA; not Palm Beach County. Later English cartographers replaced the Spanish location at Rio Seco (“Dry River”) with Boca Ratone Sounde, where a lagoon was located, now called Lake Boca Raton. The original Boca de Ratones on Biscayne Bay, was an inlet (“boca”) with a rocky bottom, that would grind (“ratonar”) mooring lines.
The city of Boca Raton has a folk etymology, relating the name as "Rat's Mouth", where ratón (“mouse”) is mistaken for rata (“rat”), and boca is "mouth". This pertains to the local belief that the area hosted a pirate's lair (rats' lair), leading the city to have a pirate ship on the city seal (“coat of arms”).
Proper noun
[edit]- A city in Palm Beach County, Florida, United States
- Ellipsis of Lake Boca Raton (“A lagoon in Palm Beach County, Florida, United States”).
Synonyms
[edit]- (former name of Boca Raton city) Bocaratone
- (former name of Lake Boca Raton) Boca Ratone Lagoon, Boca Ratone Sound, Boca Ratone Sounde
Translations
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Further reading
[edit]- Boca Raton, Florida on Wikipedia.Wikipedia (the city)