kingston








< /hɒŋ/, born 1940, U.S. novelist.

  • a seaport in and the capital of Jamaica.
  • a port in SE Ontario, in SE Canada, on Lake Ontario.
  • a city in SE New York, on the Hudson River.
  • a borough in E Pennsylvania, on the Susquehanna River opposite Wilkes-Barre.
  • noun

    1. an island in the West Indies, S of Cuba. 4413 sq. mi. (11,430 sq. km).
    2. a republic coextensive with this island: formerly a British colony; became independent in 1962, retaining membership in the Commonwealth of Nations. Capital: Kingston.

    noun

    1. the capital and chief port of Jamaica, on the SE coast: University of the West Indies. Pop: 574 000 (2005 est)
    2. a port in SE Canada, in SE Ontario: the chief naval base of Lake Ontario and a large industrial centre; university (1841). Pop: 108 158 (2001)
    3. the capital of Norfolk Island, in the S Pacific Ocean
    4. short for Kingston upon Thames

    noun

    1. an island and state in the Caribbean: colonized by the Spanish from 1494 onwards, large numbers of Black slaves being imported; captured by the British in 1655 and established as a colony in 1866; gained full independence in 1962; a member of the Commonwealth. Exports: chiefly bauxite and alumina, sugar, and bananas. Official language: English. Religion: Protestant majority. Currency: Jamaican dollar. Capital: Kingston. Pop: 2 909 714 (2013 est). Area: 10 992 sq km (4244 sq miles)

    West Indian island, from Taino (Arawakan) xaymaca, said to mean “rich in springs.” Columbus when he found it in 1494 named it Santiago, but this did not stick. Related: Jamaican. The Jamaica in New York probably is a Delaware (Algonquian) word meaning “beaver pond” altered by influence of the island name.

    Nation in the West Indies, situated south of Cuba and west of Haiti, in the Caribbean Sea. Its capital and largest city is Kingston.

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