Milwaukee

English

Etymology

Perhaps from Potawatomi minwaking, or Ojibwe ominowakiing (gathering place (by the water)), or an Algonquin word meaning for “the good land”.

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Milwaukee

  1. A number of places in the United States.
    1. The largest city in Wisconsin and the county seat of Milwaukee County.
      • 2019 October 13, “Toronto slang on the rise thanks to city's growing pop culture relevance”, in CBC News[1], archived from the original on 6 July 2022:
        During the Toronto Raptors' championship run, a fan-made sign referred to the opposing Milwaukee Bucks as the "Milwaukee Bucktees," bucktee being an insult deriving from a similar word in Somali.
      • 2020 August 18, James Poniewozik, “A D.N.C. Opening Night for the New Abnormal”, in The New York Times[2], archived from the original on 21 August 2020:
        There was no location, really — most of the convention took place in a Milwaukee of the mind. [] Instead, the teleconvention kept a few standards (like the Bruce Springsteen–soundtracked montage) and borrowed from a grab bag of other TV formats, from talk show to cable news to reality-TV reunion special.
      • 2022 October 26, Christina Zdanowicz, Claudia Dominguez, Lauren M. Johnson and Sara Smart, “The Waukesha victims included an 8-year-old boy, a loving grandmother and a woman excited to make her debut in the Dancing Grannies”, in CNN[3]:
        A GoFundMe page was created by the family and talked about how Sorenson spent her last moments celebrating the beauty of life and how she had a true passion for the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies.
    2. An unincorporated community and census-designated place in Northampton County, North Carolina.
    3. An unincorporated community in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania.

Alternative forms

Derived terms