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When Dutch settlers arrived in the Hudson Valley in the middle of the 17th century, the Mohawk called the settlement at Fort Orange "Schau-naugh-ta-da", meaning "over the pine plains." Eventually, this word entered the lexicon of the Dutch settlers, but the meaning was reversed, and the name referred to the bend in the ...
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The name "Schenectady" is derived from the Mohawk word skahnéhtati, meaning "beyond the pines" and used for the area around Albany, New York. Residents ...
SCHENECTADY definition: city in E N. Y ., on the Mohawk River: pop. 62000 | Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples in American English.
a city of eastern New York on the Mohawk river; it prospered after the opening of the Erie Canal.
... Schenectady, an Iroquois word meaning "beyond the pine barrens." It flourished as a site through which passed all goods destined for the hinterlands to the ...
Founded as a Dutch settlement in 1662, it took its name from the nearby Mohawk village of Schaunactada, probably meaning “over,” or “across the pine plains.” In ...
Princeton's WordNet. Schenectadynoun. a city of eastern New York on the Mohawk river; it prospered after the opening of the Erie Canal.
The meaning of the name is given as "the place beyond the open pines," or the place at the end of the trail through the pine flatlands. The name was thus ...
In his honor the Iroquois called it Curler or Corlaer, meaning the village of Curler, or Corlaer's village. Similarly the wild Indians of the "plains" speak of ...