nunatak

English

WOTD – 8 February 2013
Starr Nunatak, on the coast of Victoria Land, Antarctica.
Cântaro Magro, Serra da Estrela, Portugal, formed as nunatak during the last ice age and now exposed.

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Greenlandic nunataq.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈnʌnətæk/, /ˈnuːnətæk/
  • Hyphenation: nun‧a‧tak

Noun

nunatak (plural nunataks or nunataker)

  1. A mountain top or rocky element of a ridge that is surrounded by glacial ice but is not covered by ice; a peak protruding from the surface ice sheet. [from 1870s]
    • 1922, Apsley Cherry-Garrard, The Worst Journey in the World: Antarctic 1910-1913, Volume 2, Constable and Company Ltd. (1922), page 365:
      We made for a slope close to the end of the island or nunatak, where Shackleton must have got up also; it is obviously the only place when you look at it from a commanding rise.
    • 2008, Andrea M. J. Coronato, Fernando Coronato, Elizabeth Mazzoni, & Miriam Vásquez, "The Physical Geography of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego", in The Late Cenozoic of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego (ed. J. Rabassa), Elsevier (2008), →ISBN, page 45:
      Only a few lichens and mosses colonize the rocky walls of cirques and nunataks.
    • 2006, Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day, Vintage 2007, p. 155:
      The peak in whose lee you have chosen to set up your command post is far too regular in shape to be the nunatak you imagine it.


Translations

See also

Further reading

Anagrams


Danish

Etymology

Greenlandic nunataq

Noun

nunatak

  1. nunatak

Declension


Slovak

Etymology

From Greenlandic nunataq.

Noun

nunatak m (genitive singular nunataka, nominative plural nunataky, genitive plural nunatakov, declension pattern of dub)

  1. nunatak

Declension

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