United Statesian
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From United States + -ian.
Adjective
[edit]United Statesian (not comparable)
- (nonstandard) Of or pertaining to the United States of America.
- 1867, John MacGregor, The Rob Roy on the Baltic: a canoe cruise through Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Sleswig, Holstein, The North Sea, and the Baltic, 2nd edition, page 76:
- For this blue-book is a sort of school primer, intended to teach the Danes how to pronounce the United-Statesian language, and perhaps we English may have a lesson, too.
- 2005, Greg Scott, editor, Cowboy Poetry: Classic Poems & Prose by Badger Clark, page 400:
- There's a real United-Statesian bigness to some of the things Whitman says.
Quotations
[edit]- For quotations using this term, see Citations:United Statesian.
Translations
[edit]of or pertaining to the United States of America — see US-American
Noun
[edit]United Statesian (plural United Statesians)
- (nonstandard) An inhabitant or citizen of the United States of America.
- 1892, William White, Notes and queries, volume 86 (August 20), page 146:
- To those of us who know […] such entries are more amusing than inconvenient; but to an outsider, say a Frenchman or a United-Statesian, they would cause a great expenditure of useless labour.
- 2004, David Plante, American ghosts, page 175:
- If I was, through my father, a first-generation United Statesian, I found I was, through him, an eleventh-generation North American.
Quotations
[edit]- For quotations using this term, see Citations:United Statesian.
Synonyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]US-American — see US-American
References
[edit]- "United States" in Concise Oxford English Dictionary, 11th edition revised, Oxford Dictionaries, 2008.