Advertisement

Algonquian

also Algonkian, Native American people and language family, 1885, an ethnologist's word, from Algonquin, name of one of the tribes, + -ian. Both forms of the name have been used as adjectives and nouns. The people originally were spread over northeast and north-central North America, from Nova Scotia (Micmac) to Montana (Cheyenne). From 1890 in geology.

also from 1885

Entries linking to Algonquian

Algonquin

one of a Native American people living near the Ottawa River in Canada, 1620s, from French Algonquin, perhaps a contraction of Algoumequin, from Micmac algoomeaking "at the place of spearing fish and eels." But Bright suggests Maliseet (Algonquian) elægomogwik "they are our relatives or allies."

Algonquian was the name taken late 19c. by ethnologists to describe a large group of North American Indian peoples, including this tribe. The Algonquin Hotel (59 W. 44th Street, Manhattan) opened 1902 and was named by manager Frank Case for the tribes that had lived in that area. A circle of journalists, authors, critics, and wits began meeting there daily in 1919 and continued through the twenties; they called themselves "The Vicious Circle," but to others they became "The Round Table."

-ian

variant of suffix -an (q.v.), with connective -i-. From Latin -ianus, in which the -i- originally was from the stem of the word being attached but later came to be felt as connective. In Middle English frequently it was -ien, via French.

Advertisement(追記) (追記ここまで)

Trends of Algonquian

adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/. Ngrams are probably unreliable.

More to Explore

Share Algonquian

‘cite’
Page URL:
HTML Link:
APA style:
Chicago style:
MLA style:
IEEE style:

updated on September 17, 2022

Advertisement(追記) (追記ここまで)
Remove ads >
Advertisement

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /