See also: acadia, acádia, and Acádia

English edit

 
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Etymology edit

Two possibilities:

Pronunciation edit

Proper noun edit

Acadia

  1. (history) A colonial territory owned by France in the 17th and early 18th centuries, spanning over what are now the Maritime provinces of eastern Canada (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island) and part of the state of Maine in the USA.
  2. Acadia National Park, a national park in Maine.
    • 2023 September 28, Jack Healy, “National Parks, and Those Who Count on Them, Brace for Possible Shutdown”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
      The fall rush around Acadia helps workers survive winter’s lean months. But that’s all at risk if a government shutdown forces America’s national parks and monuments to lock their gates, scuttling millions of vacations and school trips, and costing tourist towns from the Everglades to Yellowstone to Death Valley an estimated $70 million a day.
  3. A parish in southern Louisiana, first settled by some Acadian exiles then by mostly Franco-Americans: see Acadia Parish.

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Latin edit

Pronunciation edit

Proper noun edit

Acadia f sg (genitive Acadiae); first declension

  1. (New Latin) Acadia (a former French colony in North America in modern eastern Canada and the United States)

Declension edit

First-declension noun, with locative, singular only.

Case Singular
Nominative Acadia
Genitive Acadiae
Dative Acadiae
Accusative Acadiam
Ablative Acadiā
Vocative Acadia
Locative Acadiae

Proper noun edit

Acadiā f

  1. ablative of Acadia