Definitions for jamaicadʒəˈmeɪ kə
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Ja•mai•cadʒəˈmeɪ kə(n.)
an island in the West Indies, S of Cuba. 4413 sq. mi. (11,430 sq. km).
Category: Geography (places)
a republic coextensive with this island: formerly a British colony; became independent in 1962; a member of the Commonwealth of Nations. 2,652,443.
Category: Geography (places)
Ref: Cap.: Kingston. 1
Ja•mai′can(adj.; n.)
Princeton's WordNet
Jamaica(noun)
a country on the island of Jamaica; became independent of England in 1962; much poverty; the major industry is tourism
Jamaica(noun)
an island in the West Indies to the south of Cuba and to the west of Haiti
Wiktionary
jamaica(Noun)
roselle
Origin: Originally Jameco, from (Lenape) word for “beaver”. Compare previous etymology.
Webster Dictionary
Jamaica(noun)
one of the West India is islands
The Nuttall Encyclopedia
Jamaica
("Land of Springs") (640, of which 15 are whites), a British crown colony, the largest and most important of the British West India Islands; is one of the Greater Antilles group, and lies some 90 m. S. of the eastern end of Cuba; its greatest length E. and W. 144 m.; is traversed by the Blue Mountains (7400 ft.), whose slopes are clad with luxuriant forests of mahogany, cedar, satin-wood, palm, and other trees; of the numerous rivers, only one, the Black River, is navigable and that for only flat-bottomed boats and canoes; there are many harbours (Kingston finest), while good roads intersect the island; the climate is oppressively warm and somewhat unhealthy on the coast, but delightful in the interior highlands; for administrative purposes the land area is divided into three counties, Surrey, Middlesex, and Cornwall; the chief trade-products are dye-woods, fruit, sugar, rum, coffee, and spices; discovered in 1494 by Columbus, and since 1670 a possession of England.
U.S. National Library of Medicine
Jamaica
An island in the Greater Antilles in the West Indies. Its capital is Kingston. It was discovered in 1494 by Columbus and was a Spanish colony 1509-1655 until captured by the English. Its flourishing slave trade was abolished in the 19th century. It was a British colony 1655-1958 and a territory of the West Indies Federation 1958-62. It achieved full independence in 1962. The name is from the Arawak Xaymaca, rich in springs or land of springs. (From Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p564 & Room, Brewer's Dictionary of Names, 1992, p267)
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