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''Nova'' follower
Answer for the clue "''Nova'' follower ", 6 letters:
scotia
Alternative clues for the word scotia
Word definitions for scotia in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 308 Housing Units (2000): 167 Land area (2000): 0.346450 sq. miles (0.897302 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.346450 sq. miles (0.897302 sq. km) FIPS code: 44070 Located within: Nebraska ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Scotia may refer to:
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Trochilus \Troch"i*lus\, n.; pl. Trochili . [L. trochilus a kind of small bird. Gr. ?, fr. ? to run.] (Zo["o]l.) A genus of humming birds. It Formerly included all the known species. Any one of several species of wrens and kinglets. The crocodile bird. ...
Usage examples of scotia.
Nova Scotia, called by the French Acadia, lies between the forty-fourth and fiftieth degrees of north latitude, having New England and the Atlantic ocean to the south and south-west, and the river and gulph of St.
No doubt the marked contrast between the neighbouring people of Nova Scotia and New England was quickly discerned by so good an observer as the author proved himself to be, while his national and partisan judgments made his characterization of the Yankee to be a double-edged sword, that cut with equal keenness the Colonist and the Democrat.
Considering the unsettled state of almost every part of the world, I think I would as soon cast my lot in Nova Scotia as in any part I know of.
Nova Scotia knows his own business real complete, farmer or fisherman, lawyer or doctor, or any other folk.
Our folks have no notion of such a country so far down east, beyond creation most, as Nova Scotia is.
I got a real nateral curiosity to show you--such a thing as you never laid your eyes on in Nova Scotia, I know.
Many disputes had arisen between the subjects of England and France concerning the limits of Nova Scotia, which no treaty had as yet properly ascertained.
The second object that employed the attention of the British ministry, was the establishment of the precise limits of Acadia, or Nova Scotia, where the new colony had suffered great mischief and interruption from the incursions of the Indians, excited to these outrages by the subjects and emissaries of France.
This country, by the possession of which an enemy would be enabled greatly to annoy all our other colonies, and, if in the hands of the French, would be of singular service both to their fishery and their sugar islands, has frequently changed hands from the French to the English, and from the English back again to the French, till our right to it was finally settled by the twelfth article of the treaty of Utrecht, by which all the country included within the ancient limits of what was called Nova Scotia or Acadia, was ceded to the English.
Even while the conferences were carried on for ascertaining the limits of Nova Scotia, the governor of Canada detached M.
Major Laurence being unable to cope with him in the field, demanded an interview, at which he desired to know for what cause the French inhabitants of Nova Scotia had shaken off their allegiance to the crown of Great Britain, and violated the neutrality which they had hitherto affected to profess.
Acadia or Nova Scotia, describe our settlements as they lie in a southerly direction, as far as the gulf of Florida.
As we have already given a geographical description of Nova Scotia, and mentioned the particulars of the new settlement of Halifax, we shall now only observe, that it is surrounded on three sides by the sea, the gulf, and river of St.
This country, situated next to Nova Scotia, lies between the forty-first and forty-fifth degrees of north latitude, extending near three hundred miles in length, and about two hundred in breadth, if we bound it by those tracts which the French possessed: no part of the settlements of this country, however, stretches above sixty miles from the sea.
Nova Scotia, to assist lieutenant-governor Laurence in driving the French from the encroachments they had made upon that province.