Maritime Provinces love

Maritime Provinces

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • The Canadian provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island, bordering on the Atlantic Ocean. They were politically distinct until joining the Canadian confederation in 1867.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • proper noun The Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun the collective name for the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Opening of the Intercolonial Railway, connecting Ontario with the Maritime Provinces; it was owned and operated by the government.

    1869-72 2001

  • Though Halifax can boast of the first newspaper in Canada, now including the Maritime Provinces (the "Royal Gazette", 1752), the first Catholic periodical, "The Cross", was founded only in 1845, by the future Archbishop W. Walsh, and lasted till 1857.

    The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip 1840-1916 1913

  • In all three Maritime Provinces political and party controversy was little known for a generation after the Revolution.

    The Canadian Dominion; a chronicle of our northern neighbor Oscar Douglas Skelton 1909

  • He insisted particularly on a provision in the Act of Union that each of the Maritime Provinces have an executive councillor in the federal government.

    Wilmot and Tilley James Hannay 1876

  • It will thus be seen that the Maritime Provinces had four representatives out of thirteen members of the cabinet, and this proportion has generally been maintained since that time; so that the fears of those who anticipated that the provinces by the sea would not receive fair treatment in the distribution of high offices have proved to be groundless.

    Wilmot and Tilley James Hannay 1876

  • Under these circumstances the people of the Canadian provinces and of the Maritime Provinces had but few opportunities of seeing each other, and the people of all the provinces knew much more of their neighbours in the United States than they did of their fellow-colonists.

    Wilmot and Tilley James Hannay 1876

  • _The Maritime Provinces_, this was effected by Glooskap with tobacco-smoke from his pipe.

    Algonquin Legends of New England Charles Godfrey Leland 1863

  • Until then - except the Maritime Provinces under Dutch rule - this country was known as Sinhale, which term did not imply a particular race but all the people who lived in the Kandyan kingdom.

    Latest Stories editor 2010

  • When the Maritime Provinces, which sought union among themselves, met at the Charlottetown Conference of 1864, delegates from the other provinces of Canada attended.

    Yahoo! Search: canada 2010

  • Our Little Canadian Cousin of the Maritime Provinces

    Blue Bonnet in Boston or, Boarding-School Days at Miss North's Caroline E. Jacobs 1924

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