Amazonian

adj
/æməˈzoʊni.ən/US

Etymology

From Amazon + -ian.

  1. derived from *hamazan- — “warrior
  2. derived from Ἀμαζών
  3. suffixed as amazonian — “Amazon + -ian

Definitions

  1. Of or relating to the Amazons

    Of or relating to the Amazons; aggressive and warlike.

  2. Having to do with the Amazon River in South America, and its surrounding region.

    • The new numbers, showing almost 10,000 sq kms were lost in the year to August, were released as emboldened farm owners scuffled with forest defenders in Altamira, the Amazonian city at the heart of the recent devastation.
  3. Of or relating to the most recent Martian geological time period.

  4. + 7 more definitions
    1. Of a woman, very tall, strong and athletic.

      • Women's tennis champions Maria Sharapova and Venus Williams are noted for their Amazonian physiques.
    2. Requiring a huge amount of work

      Requiring a huge amount of work; of extraordinary difficulty; Herculean.

      • It's to their credit that they are capable of such "transformations," as well as performing the amazonian task of surviving and working as a small theater.
      • Russian capitalism created an exploited economic class that was up against these common enemies at every turn and was forced to take on the Amazonian task of battling class rule, its ideology and state.
    3. Of or relating to Amazon.com, Inc..

      • I’ve […] languidly sipped merlot while my Amazonian inamorato responds to a high-priority event.
    4. The Amazonian geological period.

    5. An Amazon.

    6. An employee of Amazon.com, Inc..

      • […] Amazonians like David Risher, who lead^([sic]) the first expansion into retail in the 1990s; Warren Jenson, Covey's short-lived successor as CFO; and Rick Dalzell, the former Army Ranger who was Amazon's CIO for a decade.
    7. Alternative letter-case form of Amazonian

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for Amazonian. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA