Newark
proper noun
- place name
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈnjuːək/ / /ˈnuːəɹk/ / /nʊəɹk/
name
Etymology: Probably from Old English nīewe (“new”) + weorc (“work”). In this case, a perhaps more accurate sense of "work" would be that of a building, as an example of a work of labor. It appears in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Newerche.
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
“Earlier on Friday, Watson Coleman posted on social media: "We're at Delaney Hall, an ICE prison in Newark that opened without permission from the city & in violation of local ordinances.”
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places:
- Any of several places: