Australia

name
/ɒˈstɹeɪ.liː.ə/UK/ɒˈstɹeɪl.jə//ɔˈstɹeɪl.jə/US

Etymology

First attested 16th century, from Latin terra austrālis incōgnita (“unknown southern land”), from auster (“the south wind”). Used also in 1693 (quotation below). Popularised by Matthew Flinders in 1814 (quotation below). By surface analysis, Austral- + -ia. Distantly cognate to Austria, containing the same Proto-Indo-European root, but through German where it retained the earlier sense of “east” rather than “south”. See also Terra Australis.

  1. derived from root
  2. derived from terra austrālis incōgnita — “unknown southern land

Definitions

  1. An island of Oceania.

    • Had I permitted myself any innovation upon the original term, it would have been to convert it into AUSTRALIA; as being more agreeable to the ear, and an assimilation to the names of the other great portions of the earth.
  2. A country consisting of a main island, the island of Tasmania and other smaller islands,…

    A country consisting of a main island, the island of Tasmania and other smaller islands, located in Oceania; historically, a collection of former colonies of the British Empire. Official name: Commonwealth of Australia. Capital: Canberra.

    • During Movember (the month formerly known as November), men around the globe grow mustaches (hence the name) while raising money for men’s health issues. Movember started in Australia in 2003.
    • The statement did not specify the location of that trip, but provided further details of her romantic life, stating that Saroukos and her husband spent eight days together before she returned to Australia on Dec. 21.
  3. A continent consisting of the land on the Australian tectonic plate, i.e. Australia, New…

    A continent consisting of the land on the Australian tectonic plate, i.e. Australia, New Guinea and intervening islands.

    • He is going to Australia for his honeymoon for 10 days.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for Australia. 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