Vulcan

See also: vulcan

English

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /ˈvʌlkən/

Etymology 1

From Latin Vulcānus, of Etruscan origin, but unknown meaning.

Proper noun

Vulcan

  1. (Roman mythology) The god of volcanoes and fire, especially the forge, also the patron of all craftsmen, principally blacksmiths. The Roman counterpart of Hephaestus.
    The goddess Venus was the wife of Vulcan.
  2. (astronomy, historical) A hypothetical planet proposed to exist in an orbit between Mercury and the Sun in a 19th-century hypothesis.
  3. A town in southern Alberta, Canada.
  4. A ghost town in Colorado
  5. An inactive volcano in New Mexico
  6. A volcano in Papua New Guinea
  7. A city and a few villages in Romania
Derived terms
Translations
See also

Etymology 2

From Vulcan (etymology 1), from the Star Trek TV series of the 1960s.

Proper noun

Vulcan

  1. (fiction) An inhabited planet, the homeworld of the Vulcan species.
    • 1998, The Mother Dance: How Children Change Your Life, London, page 159:
      Steve and I explained the new program to our children, who looked at us as if we had just announced that we were from the planet Vulcan.

Noun

Vulcan (plural Vulcans)

  1. (fiction) An inhabitant of the planet Vulcan.
  2. (slang, derogatory) A person who seems to lack emotion or is overly analytical and boring (like the fictional Vulcans).
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