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Merrimack in American English (ˈmɛrəˌmæk ) or ˈMerrimac (ˈmɛrəˌmæk ) noun. a U.S. frigate armored by the Confederates and engaged by the Monitor, a Union ironclad, in the first battle (1862) between ironclads. Confederate name, Virginia.
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noun · a town in S New Hampshire. · a river in central New Hampshire and NE Massachusetts, flowing S and NE to the Atlantic. 110 miles (175 km) long.
Merrimack, New Hampshire, a town ; Merrimack County, New Hampshire ; Merrimack River, in Massachusetts and New Hampshire ; Merrimack Valley, the region surrounding ...
noun. a warship (originally the Union steamer Merrimack ) that the Confederates converted into an ironclad, renamed the Virginia, and used against the Monitor ...
a river that rises in south central New Hampshire and flows through Concord and Manchester into Massachusetts and empties into the Atlantic Ocean.
Dec 13, 2011 · It literally translates to "swift water place." See how you do on this quiz: 1. Name of the river. 2. Name of the Massachusetts town on the ...
Merrimack definition: A U.S. frigate armored by the Confederates and engaged by the Monitor, a Union ironclad, in the first battle (1862) between ironclads.
1. a river in central New Hampshire and NE Massachusetts, flowing S and NE to the Atlantic. 110 mi. (175 km) long.
noun. an ironclad vessel built by the Confederate forces in the hope of breaking the blockade imposed by the North.
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Merrimack is a Native American term meaning sturgeon, a type of fish. The Pennacook people named the Merrimack River after this fish because of the vast ...