Haligonian

adj
/ˌhælɪˈɡəʊ.ni.ən/UK/ˌhælɪˈɡoʊ.ni.ən/US

Etymology

Likely from a false folk etymology deriving Halifax from Old English hāliġ feax ("holy hair"), although it probably actually came from halh + ġefeaxe ("grassy corner"). To this root halig- was added the -onian suffix, probably with analogy to other British demonyms following a similar pattern such as Oxonian, Cantabrigian, Mancunian, Glaswegian, etc. The original demonym was Halifaxian from the Nova Scotian city's founding in 1749 until the early 19th century (around the third generation of residents), when Haligonian became preferred. The reason for the change may be in part due to a negative association with the original demonym.

  1. derived from hāliġ feax — “holy hair

Definitions

  1. Of, from or relating to the city of Halifax, West Yorkshire, England.

  2. Of, from or relating to the city of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

  3. A native or inhabitant of the city of Halifax, West Yorkshire, England.

  4. + 1 more definition
    1. A native or inhabitant of the city of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

      • The Haligonian is "not known to Halifax Regional Police in any significant way," she said.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for Haligonian. 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