different between shipwreck vs maroon

shipwreck

English

Alternative forms

  • shipwrack

Etymology

From Middle English schip-wracke, from Old English scipwræc (jetsam), equivalent to ship +? wrack. Cognate with Scots schip-wrak (to shipwreck, verb), Swedish skeppsvrak (shipwreck). Modern form is due to influence from wreck.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???p??k/

Noun

shipwreck (countable and uncountable, plural shipwrecks)

  1. A ship that has sunk or run aground so that it is no longer seaworthy.
    • 1670, John Dryden and William D'Avenant, The Tempest
      heaven will drive shipwrecks ashore to make us all rich
  2. An event where a ship sinks or runs aground.
    • 1688, John Dryden, The Life of St Francis Xavier
      they made the coast of Cochin China, and the tempests, which rose at the same time, threatened them more than once with shipwreck
  3. (figuratively) Destruction; ruin; irretrievable loss.
    • Holding faith and a good conscience, which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwreck.
    • 1879, John Morley, Burke
      It was upon an Indian bill that the late ministry had made shipwreck.

Synonyms

  • shipbreach

Derived terms

  • shipwrecky

Translations

Verb

shipwreck (third-person singular simple present shipwrecks, present participle shipwrecking, simple past and past participle shipwrecked)

  1. To wreck a boat through a collision or mishap.

Translations

See also

  • castaway

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maroon

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /m???u?n/, /m?????n/, /m?????n/
  • Hyphenation: ma?roon
  • Rhymes: -u?n, -??n

Etymology 1

From French marron (feral; fugitive, adjective), from Spanish cimarrón (fugitive, wild, feral), from Taíno.

Noun

maroon (plural maroons)

  1. An escaped negro slave of the Caribbean and the Americas or a descendant of escaped slaves. [from 17th c.]
    • 1985, Wade Davis, The Serpent and the Rainbow, Simon & Schuster, p. 193:
      Further north a Maroon community in the Bahoruco Mountains thrived for eighty-five years, until the French proposed a truce under the terms of which the Maroons would be permitted to form an independent clan.
    • 2007, Kevin Filan, The Haitian Vodou Handbook, Destiny Books 2007, p. 14:
      Joining others who had escaped before them, they formed communities of Maroons in which many traditional African customs and social mores were preserved.
  2. A castaway; a person who has been marooned. [from 19th c.]
    Synonym: castaway
Alternative forms
  • Maroon
Translations

Adjective

maroon (not comparable)

  1. Associated with Maroon culture, communities or peoples.
    • 2002, Cynthia James, The Maroon Narrative: Caribbean Literature in English Across Boundaries, Ethnicities, and Centuries, Heinemann Educational Books
      In her discussion of Michelle Cliff's Abeng, a novel that historicizes maroon culture and the Jamaican warrior heroine Nanny of the Maroons, Francoise Lionnet examines linguistic “metissage” []
Translations

Verb

maroon (third-person singular simple present maroons, present participle marooning, simple past and past participle marooned)

  1. To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island.
    • 2010, Brogan Steele, From the Jaws of Death: Extreme True Adventures of Man vs. Nature, St. Martin's Griffin (?ISBN), page 231:
      After the harrowing stories of being marooned at sea and stranded in the frozen wastelands of Alaska and the Poles, one would think that survival on dry land would be easier []
Derived terms
  • marooner
Translations

Further reading

  • A good short account of the "Bush Negroes" in Suriname

Etymology 2

French marron (chestnut; brown), from Italian marrone (chestnut; brown), from Byzantine Greek ?????? (máraon, sweet chestnut). Compare Spanish marrón.

Noun

maroon (plural maroons)

  1. A rich dark red, somewhat brownish, color.
    • 2009, Ben Long, The Nikon D90 Companion: Practical Photography Advice You Can Take Anywhere, O'Reilly Media, Inc. (?ISBN), page 176:
      Is it a really dark maroon or a lighter maroon or a maroon that leans toward the red side? Or the magenta side? To address this issue, scientists use something called a color space.
Translations

Adjective

maroon (comparative more maroon, superlative most maroon)

  1. Of a maroon color
Translations

See also

  • (reds) red; blood red, brick red, burgundy, cardinal, carmine, carnation, cerise, cherry, cherry red, Chinese red, cinnabar, claret, crimson, damask, fire brick, fire engine red, flame, flamingo, fuchsia, garnet, geranium, gules, hot pink, incarnadine, Indian red, magenta, maroon, misty rose, nacarat, oxblood, pillar-box red, pink, Pompeian red, poppy, raspberry, red violet, rose, rouge, ruby, ruddy, salmon, sanguine, scarlet, shocking pink, stammel, strawberry, Turkey red, Venetian red, vermillion, vinaceous, vinous, violet red, wine (Category: en:Reds)

Etymology 3

Unknown. Possibly owing to the fact that the color of a fired flare was commonly red.

Noun

maroon (plural maroons)

  1. (nautical) A rocket-propelled firework or skyrocket, often one used as a signal (e.g. to summon the crew of a lifeboat or warn of an air raid).
    • 1887, “Metropolitan Reports,” The Chemist and Druggist, 5 November, 1887, p. 564,[1]
      On Sunday afternoon a serious firework explosion occurred in Lambeth, whereby three persons were seriously injured. Two lads [] purchased a firework called a “maroon”, which is a bomb consisting of a small ball of string covered with a red composition. It is loaded with gunpowder, and there is also a fuse attached.
    • 1891, William Archer (translator), “At the Fair” in Tales of Two Countries by Alexander Kielland, New York: Harper, p. 73,[2]
      As the evening falls, colored lamps and Chinese lanterns are lighted around the venerable oak which stands in the middle of the fairground and boys climb about among its topmost branches with maroons and Bengal lights.
    • 1900, Alan C. Jenkins, Introducing Horses, London: Spring Books,[3]
      Many a seaman’s life may have depended on equine speed and strength. Some of these ‘Lifeboat Horses’ used to recognise the maroon which was fired to summon the Lifeboat crew. Long after its retirement one of the horses which regularly helped to haul the Hoylake Lifeboat heard a maroon fired one day when it was working in the neighbouring fields. It immediately became very excited and made for the boathouse.
    • 1932, George Bernard Shaw, Too True to Be Good, Act II,[4]
      And now I am off to inspect stores. There is a shortage of maroons that I don’t understand.
    • 1933, H. G. Wells, The Shape of Things to Come, Book 2, Chapter 9,[5]
      The big air raids [] were much more dreadful than the air raids of the World War. They began with a nightmare of warning maroons, sirens, hooters and the shrill whistles of cyclist scouts, then swarms of frantic people running to and fro []

Etymology 4

From an intentional mispronunciation of the word moron used by the cartoon character Bugs Bunny.

Noun

maroon (plural maroons)

  1. (slang, derogatory) An idiot; a fool.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:fool, Thesaurus:idiot
    • 2011, S. Watts Taylor, Tarnish, iUniverse (2011), ?ISBN, page 21:
      At least, I would not be sleeping that night. Why did I have that espresso? What a maroon!

Anagrams

  • Morano, Romano-, romano

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