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'Merican
[ mer-i-kuhn ]
adjective
- contraction of American (often used humorously to suggest either a sarcastic or patriotic sentiment): I’m gonna get me some real ’Merican food.
It’s easy to get lured into the ’Merican appetite for more, more, more.
I’m gonna get me some real ’Merican food.
noun
- contraction of American (often used humorously to suggest either a sarcastic or patriotic sentiment): Most of the guests in this hotel are ’Mericans, just like us.
By Thursday, we’d had quite enough of these ’Mericans.
Most of the guests in this hotel are ’Mericans, just like us.
Word History and Origins
Origin of 'Merican1
Example Sentences
Simpson Imports sells its canned and boxed tomatoes, as well as tomato sauces and a tomato paste, under its “San Merican Tomatoes” brand, which it said was made with a “proprietary blend of Roma tomatoes.”
Portrayed in European accounts as subordinate, the interpreter has since been discussed as a “diplomat and a linguist” who sparked interest in “Malay navigation skills, boat building and the expanse of Malay travels across the oceans,” Merican said.
The interpreter should “move out of the shadows of Magellan,” said Ahmad Murad Merican, a professor at the International Institute of Islamic Thought and Civilization of the International Islamic University Malaysia.
Like the Raptors, the Clan are the only sports team of their ilk in Canada, because while the other 27 college football programs in the country adhere to CFL rules under the banner of U Sports Football, SFU play the game 'merican style HOO-AHH.
UC officials also presented data on student loan debt, which showed that African merican, Latino and Native American students took on more debt than their peers.
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