Alaska

See also: alaska

English

A map of the United States of America with the state of Alaska highlighted in red

Etymology

From Aleut alaxsxaq (that toward which the action of the sea is directed).[1] Commonly misattributed to Russian ала (ala) + -ский (-skij, adjectival suffix).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: ə-lăsʹkə, IPA(key): /əˈlæs.kə/
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: Alas‧ka

Proper noun

Alaska

  1. The 49th state of the United States of America. Postal code: AK, capital: Juneau, largest city: Anchorage.
    • 1869, George Davidson, Pacific Coast. Coast Pilot of Alaska, (First Part,) From Southern Boundary to Cook's Inlet. 1869, p. 32f.:
      We have no available sources of information concerning the vegetation northward of the peninsula of Alaska from Bristol Bay, in 58°, to the mouth of the Kwichpak, in latitude 63°.
    • 1875, A History of the Wrongs of Alaska. An Appeal to the People and Press of America. Printed by Order of the Anti-Monopoly Association of the Pacific Coast. February, 1875, p. 3:
      Alaska was discovered about a century ago by Russian furhunters[.]
    • 2004, Transformation of the U.S. Army Alaska: Final Environmental Impact Statement. Volume 1. Prepared For: United States Army Alaska   Department of the Army. Prepared By: Center for Environmental Management of Military Lands   Colorado State University   Fort Collins, Colorado, p. 3-108:
      Alaska's earliest inhabitants were nomadic hunters traveling in small bands. They arrived in interior Alaska at least 13,000 years ago [...]

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

Alaska (plural Alaskas)

  1. Ellipsis of baked Alaska.
    • 1879 December 5, George Augustus [Henry] Sala, “Fashion and Food in New York”, in America Revisited: From the Bay of New York to the Gulf of Mexico, and from Lake Michigan to the Pacific. [...] Illustrated with Nearly 400 Engravings. In Two Volumes, volume I, London: Vizetelly & Co., 42, Catherine Street, Strand, published 1882, OCLC 715045365; 3nd edition, London: Vizetelly & Co., 42, Catherine Street, Strand, 1883, OCLC 2606268, page 90:
      I dined at Delmonico's hard by the Fifth-avenue Hotel, a few nights ago; and among the dainties which that consummate caterer favoured us with, was an entremet called an "Alaska." The "Alaska" is a baked ice. A beau mentir qui vient de loin; but this is no traveller's tale. The nucleus or core of the entremet is an ice cream. This is surrounded by an envelope of carefully whipped cream, which, just before the dainty dish is served, is popped into the oven, or is brought under the scorching influence of a red hot salamander; so that its surface is covered with a light brown crust. So you go on discussing the warm cream soufflé till you come, with somewhat painful suddenness, on the row of ice.
    • 2006 July, “Ice Cream: Some Great Stops, from Parlors to Gelaterias”, in Rebecca Burns, editor, Atlanta, volume 46, number 3, Atlanta, Ga., ISSN 0004-6701, OCLC 60626245, page 80:
      Preparing the dessert, Dunlap pours a shallow pool of crème anglaise into a dish and adds an Alaska. Next he pours half Bacardi 151 rum ("this one's not for drinking," he warns) and half root beer schnapps into a sauceboat. It's show time! [] We dip the spoon into the Bacardi/schnapps mixture, and heat the spoon's base with a mini torch. When the spoon goes back into the sauceboat, its contents ignite immediately. Yikes! Next, with our left hand, we pick up a long knife and place the tip firmly into the meringue-covered Alaska. Then, with our right, we pick up the flaming rum- and schnapps-filled sauceboat and pour it down the side of the knife. We gape as flaming liquid hits the dessert and encases it in flames. Oooh! Ahhh!

Alternative forms

See also

  • Appendix:Place names in Alaska

References

  1. Alaska” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary, 2001–2019.

Further reading

Anagrams


Catalan

Proper noun

Alaska f

  1. Alaska (state and peninsula)

Danish

Etymology

Borrowed from English Alaska.

Proper noun

Alaska (genitive Alaskas)

  1. Alaska

Faroese

Etymology

From English Alaska, from Aleut alaxsxaq.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /aˈlaska/

Proper noun

Alaska n

  1. Alaska

Declension

Singular
Indefinite
Nominative Alaska
Accusative Alaska
Dative Alaska
Genitive Alaska

Derived terms

  • alaskalupin

German

Etymology

From English Alaska, from Aleut alaxsxaq.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /aˈlaska/, [ʔäˈläs.kä], [ʔɐˈläs.kɐ]
  • (file)

Proper noun

Alaska n (genitive Alaskas)

  1. Alaska
  2. the Alaska peninsula

Synonyms

  • Alaschka

Icelandic

Etymology

From English Alaska, from Aleut alaxsxaq.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈaːlaska/

Proper noun

Alaska n

  1. Alaska

Declension

Derived terms


Norwegian Bokmål

Proper noun

Alaska

  1. Alaska

Norwegian Nynorsk

Proper noun

Alaska

  1. Alaska

Polish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /aˈla.ska/
  • (file)

Proper noun

Alaska f

  1. Alaska (one state of the USA)
    Mieszkam na Alasce. – I live in Alaska.

Declension

Derived terms

  • Alaskanin m, Alaskanka f
  • (rare: Alaskijczyk, Alaskijka)
  • adjective: alaski (rare: alaskijski)

Further reading

  • Alaska in Polish dictionaries at PWN

Portuguese

Proper noun

Alaska m

  1. Alternative spelling of Alasca

Romanian

Proper noun

Alaska f

  1. Alaska (U.S. State)

Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /aˈlaska/

Proper noun

Alaska f

  1. Alaska

See also


Swedish

Proper noun

Alaska

  1. Alaska
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