The
United
STATES
of
America 
Many of our 50 states have names that are derived from the native peoples who lived in that area and from the explorers that discovered and settled the area.
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ALABAMA |
an Indian tribal name - meaning not known. Spelling influenced by the Spaniards. |
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ALASKA |
an Aleutian word for mainland |
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ARIZONA |
Papago - place of the small spring |
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ARKANSAS |
an Indian tribal name - pronounced Arkansaw. The s, was added by the French to make a plural |
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CALIFORNIA |
an invented name for an imaginary island - the explorer Cortes is said to have transferred the name to the state |
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COLORADO |
Spanish - meaning reddish, for the color of the Colorado river |
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CONNECTICUT |
Algonquian - meaning long river. The second c, has never been pronounced. |
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DELAWARE |
For Thomas West, Lord de la Warr. (1577-1618 ) |
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FLORIDA |
Spanish - meaning flowered, flowery, but also suggesting Easter, when the name was given. |
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GEORGIA |
For George II |
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HAWAII |
Meaning, place of the gods, with particular reference to the gods. |
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IDAHO |
An Apache name of uncertain meaning |
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ILLINOIS |
Algonquian - meaning men and warriors |
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INDIANA |
Latinised name in honor of Indian tribes |
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IOWA |
An Indian tribal name of uncertain meaning |
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KANSAS |
Based on the name of an Indian tribe |
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KENTUCKY |
Iroquois - meaning meadow land |
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LOUISIANA |
For Louis XIV of France |
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MAINE |
from mainland - changed by the French to correspond to a French province. |
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MARYLAND |
for Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I. |
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MASSACHUSETTS |
means "at the big hills" in Algonquian |
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MICHIGAN |
another Algonquian word translating to "big lake" or "forest clearing." |
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MINNESOTA |
Sioux word meaning "cloudy water" |
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MISSISSIPPI |
Algonquian for "big river" |
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MISSOURI |
this was the Algonquian word for the river and may mean "muddy river" |
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MONTANA |
Spanish - mountainous |
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NEBRASKA |
Sioux - "flat water", originally referring to the River Platte area. |
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NEVADA |
Spanish - "snowy" - a reference to the Sierra Nevada mountains. |
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NEW HAMPSHIRE |
Named by an early settler, John Mason, who came from Hampshire county in England. |
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NEW JERSEY |
Named after the Channel Island, Jersey, by Sir George Carteret, who came from there. |
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NEW MEXICO |
Named in the hope that the area would prove as rich in resources as Mexico. |
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NEW YORK |
Name for the duke of York, the brother of Charles II. |
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NORTH CAROLINA |
Named after Charles IX of France. Carolina, a Latin feminine form of Charles. |
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NORTH DAKOTA |
An Indian tribal name meaning "alliance of friends." |
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OHIO |
An Iroquoian name meaning "beautiful river." |
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OKLAHOMA |
A Choctaw name meaning "red people." |
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OREGON |
Possibly a misreading of the river name in Wisconsin, spelt the Ouaricon-sint on an 18th century map, with the last 4 letters on the next line. |
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PENNSYLVANIA |
From William Penn plus the Latin "sylvan" to mean "woodland." |
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RHODE ISLAND |
From the Greek island of Rhodes |
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SOUTH CAROLINA |
see NORTH CAROLINA |
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SOUTH DAKOTA |
see NORTH DAKOTA |
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TENNESSEE |
Derived from an Anglicized spelling of a Cherokee river name. |
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TEXAS |
1) from a Indian tribal name 2) a misunderstanding of a native American greeting meaning "good friend." |
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UTAH |
Indian tribe name |
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VERMONT |
from the French vert+mont meaning "green mountain." |
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VIRGINIA |
For Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen |
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WASHINGTON |
Named after George Washington, first American president. |
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WEST VIRGINIA |
same as VIRGINIA |
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WISCONSIN |
An Algonquian word meaning "long river." |
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WYOMING |
Algonquian for "broad plains." |
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