Montana
proper noun
- American state
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /mɑnˈtænə/
name
Etymology: From Latin montāna * the US state via Spanish montaña (“mountain”) * the surname from Spanish Montaña topographic surname
- A placename.
- A placename.
- A placename.
- A placename.
“Mr. WADE. I move to take up House bill No. 15 to provide a temporary government for the Territory of Montana.”
“While I've gazed at the sky from my sleeping bag on isolated mountaintops in Montana and southern beaches of Mexico and seen a jazillion stars basking in the peace of the evening, only in Rishikesh do the jazillion merge upon another bajillion jazillion and seem to lay overhead thick as glittering ceiling tiles.”
- A placename.
- A placename.
- A placename.
- A placename.
- A placename.
- A placename.
- A unisex given name transferred from the place name, specifically from the name of the U.S. state.
“'Montana?' I said. 'You can't call a kid Montana'―these friends of mine were going to call their new baby girl Montana and I tried to talk them out of it, because I'm sick of Australians naming their kids after American placenames, I'm sick of all these Montanas and Delawares and Indianas and Dallases. […]”
- A surname from Spanish, equivalent to English Mountain, Mount, or Hill.
“Legendary NFL quarterback Joe Montana and his wife confronted a woman suspected of trying to kidnap their grandchild Saturday, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.”