Definitions for quebeckwɪˈbɛk, kɪ-; keɪ-

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Random House Webster's College Dictionary

Que•beckwɪˈbɛk, kɪ-; keɪ-(n.)

  1. a province in E Canada. 7,149,900; 594,860 sq. mi. (1,540,685 sq. km). Abbr.: QC, P.Q., Qué.

    Category: Geography (places)

  2. the capital of this province, on the St. Lawrence. 167,517.

    Category: Geography (places)

Que•bec′er(n.)

Que•beck′er(n.)

Princeton's WordNet

  1. Quebec, Quebec City(noun)

    the French-speaking capital of the province of Quebec; situated on the Saint Lawrence River

  2. Quebec(noun)

    the largest province of Canada; a French colony from 1663 to 1759 when it was lost to the British

Wiktionary

  1. Quebec(ProperNoun)

    Province in eastern Canada.

  2. Quebec(ProperNoun)

    Capital city of Quebec province.

  3. Quebec(ProperNoun)

    The letter Q in the ICAO spelling alphabet.

  4. Origin: From kepék, originally referred to the area around Quebec City where the Saint Lawrence River narrows to a cliff-lined gap.

The Nuttall Encyclopedia

  1. Quebec

    formerly called Lower Canada, one of the Canadian provinces occupying that part of the valley of the St. Lawrence, and a narrow stretch of fertile, well-cultivated land on the S. of the river, which is bounded on the S. by the States of New York and Maine, and on the E. by New Brunswick; it is twice the size of Great Britain, and consists of extensive tracks of cultivated land and forests interspersed with lakes and rivers, affluents of the St. Lawrence; the soil, which is fertile, yields good crops of cereals, hay, and fruit, and excellent pasturage, and there is abundance of mineral wealth; it was colonised by the French in 1608, was taken by the English in 1759-60, and the great majority of the population is of French extraction.

  2. Quebec

    the capital of the above province, and once of all Canada, a city of historical interest, is situated on the steep promontory, 333 feet in height, of the NW. bank of the St. Lawrence, at the mouth of the St. Charles River, 300 m. from the sea, and 180 m. below Montreal; it is divided into Upper and Lower, the latter the business quarter and the former the west-end, as it were; there are numerous public buildings, including the governor's residence, an Anglican cathedral, and a university; it is a commercial centre, has a large trade in timber, besides several manufacturing industries; the aspect of the town is Norman-French, and there is much about it and the people to remind one of Normandy.

U.S. National Library of Medicine

  1. Quebec

    A province of eastern Canada. Its capital is Quebec. The region belonged to France from 1627 to 1763 when it was lost to the British. The name is from the Algonquian quilibek meaning the place where waters narrow, referring to the gradually narrowing channel of the St. Lawrence or to the narrows of the river at Cape Diamond. (From Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p993 & Room, Brewer's Dictionary of Names, 1992, p440)


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