maroons

listen to the pronunciation of maroons
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
third-person singular of maroon
plural of , maroon
maroon
A rocket fired to summon the crew of a lifeboat
maroon
A dark red, somewhat brownish, color

maroon colour:.

maroon
To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a deserted island
maroon
Associated with Maroon culture, communities or peoples
maroon
Of a maroon color
maroon
An escaped negro slave of the Caribbean and the Americas or a descendant of escaped slaves
maroon
to put ashore and abandon (a person) on a desolate coast or island
maroon
{n} a free black living on the hills in the W. Indies
maroon
{v} to live on a desolate island
maroon
An exploding device that produces a loud bang Aerial maroons are the most common, the composition being wither blackpowder or flashpowder From French - marron - chestnut (from the noise they make in a fire)
maroon
an exploding firework used as a warning signal a dark purplish red to dark brownish red a person who is stranded (as on an island); "when the tide came in I was a maroon out there"
maroon
- British term for a salute
maroon
Descendants of African slaves who fought for, and won, their freedom from the Dutch colonial administration and established autonomous republics in the interior of Suriname apparently since the middle of the 18th century They make up 10-15% of the Surinamese population and are the majority population in the interior
maroon
A dark red, somewhat brownish, colour
maroon
leave stranded or isolated withe little hope og rescue; "the travellers were marooned"
maroon
See 4th Maroon
maroon
a person who is stranded (as on an island); "when the tide came in I was a maroon out there"
maroon
A brownish or dull red of any description, esp
maroon
{f} abandon in a desolate place (especially an island)
maroon
In the West Indies and Guiana, a fugitive slave, or a free negro, living in the mountains
maroon
Having the color called maroon
maroon
A castaway; a person who has been marooned
maroon
leave stranded on a desert island without resources; "The mutinous sailors were marooned on an island"
maroon
an exploding firework used as a warning signal
maroon
dark brownish to purplish red
maroon
Something that is maroon is dark reddish-purple in colour. maroon velvet curtains
maroon
An explosive shell
maroon
a variable color averaging a dark red
maroon
A runaway slave sent to the Calabouco, or place where such slaves were punished, as the Maroons of Brazil Those of Jamaica are the offspring of runaways from the old Jamaica plantations or from Cuba, to whom, in 1738, the British Government granted a tract of land, on which they built two towns The word is from the verb “maroon,” to set a person on an inhospitable shore and leave him there (a practice common with pirates and buccaneers) The word is a corruption of Cimarron, a word applied by Spaniards to anything unruly, whether man or beast (See Scott: Pirate, xxii )
maroon
If someone is marooned somewhere, they are left in a place that is difficult for them to escape from. Five couples were marooned in their caravans when the River Avon broke its banks. a dark brownish red colour (marron ). to be left in a place where there are no other people and where you cannot escape
maroon
{s} brownish-red
maroon
{i} brownish-red color; explosive device making a loud noise (British); act of abandoning someone in a deserted place (especially an island)
maroon
a dark purplish red to dark brownish red
maroon
See Marron, 3
maroon
of a scarlet cast rather than approaching crimson or purple
maroon
To put (a person) ashore on a desolate island or coast and leave him to his fate
maroons

    النطق

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ m&-'rün ] (noun.) 1666. French maron, marron, modification of American Spanish cimarrón, from cimarrón wild, savage.
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