What is the difference between canuck and canadian?
canuck | canadian |
(Canada, informal) A Canadian.
* 1849 , James Edward Alexander,
A Canadian, especially a French Canadian.
* 1835 , Henry Cook Todd, Notes Upon Canada and the United States , p 92:
* 1889 , John G. Donkin, Trooper and Redskin in the Far North-West: Recollections of Life in the North-West Mounted Police, Canada, 1884-1888 , Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, p 148:
The French-Canadian dialect.
* 1904 , (Holman Francis Day), “Song of the Men o' the Ax: Verse Stories of the Plain Folk Who Are Keeping Bright the Old Home Fires Up in Maine”, in Kin o' Ktaadn , p 145:
(rare) A thing from Canada.
* 1887 : Grip (Toronto), 19 February, p 3:
(US, obsolete) A Canadian pony or horse.
* 1860 , Josiah Gilbert Holland, Miss Gilbert's Career: An American Story , p 25:
(ice hockey) A member of the (Vancouver Canucks) professional NHL ice hockey team.
The fighter-interceptor.
Canadian.
* 1887 , Grip (Toronto), 5 March, pp 1–2:
PRA1-PA56,M1 56], [http://books.google.com/books?id=xtf9teh-BTYC&pg=RA1-PA128&vq=Canuck&source=gbs_search_r&cad=0_1&sig=ACfU3U35vab6w9ksqNsmlBI9Ba1f2EK0uA 128–29. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-23-105557-4.
* Allen, Irving Lewis (1990). (informal) The English language as used (spoken or written) in Canada; Canadian English.
A town in Oklahoma.
A city and county seat in Texas.
Of or pertaining to Canada.
Of or pertaining to Canadians.
Of or pertaining to Canadian (or Canadian English).
Canuck is a synonym of canadian.
canuck
English
(wikipedia Canuck)Alternative forms
* canuck * Canack, Cannack, Canuc, canuc, Canuk, Conuck, Cunnuck, Kanuck, Kanuk, K'nuck (obsolete)Noun
(en noun)L'Acadie; or, Seven Years' Explorations in British America, v 1, London: Henry Colburn, pp 272–3:
- We saw a few partridges: we also met a lusty fellow in a forest road with a keg of whisky slung round him, who called to us ‘Come boys and have some grog, I'm what you call a canuck :’ a (Canadian).
- Jonathan distinguishes a Dutch or a French Canadian, by the term Kanuk .
- It is a pity these Canadian militiamen spoilt the good work they had done by never-failing bluster. But for pure and unadulterated brag I will back the lower-class Canuck against the world. The Yankee is a very sucking dove compared to his northern neighbour.
- On the deacon-seat in the leapin' heat / With the corn-cobs drawin' cool and sweet, / And timin' the fiddle with tunkin' feet, / A hundred men and a chorus. / “Roule, roulant, ma boule roulant,” / all Canuck but a good song; / Lift it up then, good and strong, / for a cozy night's before us.
- Who'll buy my caller herrin'? / Cod, turbot, ling, delicious herrin', / Buy my caller herrin', / They're every one Kanucks !
- I'll sit here and blow till he comes round with his old go-cart, and then I'll hang on to the tail of it, and try legs with that little Kanuck of his.
Usage notes
In Canada, the term is not derogatory, and is considered to apply to all Canadians. In the United States the term is often considered derogatory, and is particularly derogatory when applied to French Canadians in New England.Synonyms
* Canadian * Canajun, Canajan * Johnny-CanuckDerived terms
* Canuckian * Canuckiana * Johnny Canuck * Jack Canuck * Janey Canuck * Soviet CanuckistanAdjective
(en adjective)- Well, what do you think of the Canuck elections?
Quotations
* (English Citations of "Canuck")References
* * * * * “Canuck” at The Mavens’ Word of the Day, October 31, 2000. Random House. * Adler, Jacob and Mitford M. Mathews (1975). “The Etymology of Canuck''” in ''American Speech , v 50, n 1/2 (Spring–Summer), pp 158–60. * Allen, Irving Lewis (1981).
The Language of Ethnic Conflict],pp [http://books.google.com/books?id=xtf9teh-BTYC&pg=RA1-PA128&vq=Canuck&source=gbs_search_r&cad=0_1&sig=ACfU3U35vab6w9ksqNsmlBI9Ba1f2EK0uA
Unkind Words: Ethnic Labeling from Redskin to WASP, pp 59, 61–62. New York: Bergin & Garvey. ISBN 0-89789-217-8. * Dollinger, Stefan (2006). “
Towards a fully revised and extended edition of the Dictionary of Canadianisms on Historical Principles (DCHP-2): background, challenges, prospects” in Historical Sociolinguistics/Sociohistorical Linguisics (Leiden, NL), v 6. * Safire, William (2008).
Safire's Political Dictionary],[http://books.google.com/books?id=jK-0NPoMiYoC&pg=PA100&vq=Canuck&source=gbs_search_r&cad=0_1&sig=ACfU3U2FC2TY6Nc0JaECrIL2JsKwgwcF4g p 100. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-534334-2. * Schuhmacher, W.W. (1989). “Once More Canuck''” in ''American Speech , v 64, n 2 (Summer), p 149. * Sledd, James (1978). “What Are We Going to Do about It Now That We're Number One?” in American Speech , v 53, n 3 (Autumn), pp 171–98. English informal demonyms