Luanda
1
[ loo-an-duh, -ahn- ]
/ luˈæn də, -ˈɑn- /
noun
a female given name: from a Bantu word meaning “melody.”
Definition for luanda (2 of 3)
Luanda
2
[ loo-an-duh, -ahn- ]
/ luˈæn də, -ˈɑn- /
noun
a seaport in and the capital of Angola, in SW Africa.
Also
Lo·an·da
[loh-an-duh, -ahn-; Portuguese loo-ahn-duh] /loʊˈæn də, -ˈɑn-; Portuguese lʊˈɑ̃ də/.
Definition for luanda (3 of 3)
Angola
[ ang-goh-luh ]
/ æŋˈgoʊ lə /
noun
a republic in SW Africa: formerly an overseas province of Portugal; gained independence Nov. 11, 1975. 481,226 sq. mi. (1,246,375 sq. km). Capital: Luanda.
Formerly
Portuguese West Africa.
OTHER WORDS FROM Angola
An·go·lan, adjective, nounExample sentences from the Web for luanda
Arik Air offers direct flights from New York to Lagos, on to growing business hubs Accra, Luanda, and Johannesburg.
Africa Is Rising: Inside the Continent’s Great Economic Leap |Jake Bright |January 6, 2013 |DAILY BEASTIn 1975 he went from benighted Warsaw to far more benighted Luanda to cover the civil war in Angola.
British Dictionary definitions for luanda (1 of 2)
Luanda
Loanda
/ (lʊˈændə) /
noun
the capital of Angola, a port in the west, on the Atlantic: founded in 1576, it became a centre of the slave trade to Brazil in the 17th and 18th centuries; oil refining. Pop: 2 839 000 (2005 est)
Official name: São Paulo de Loanda
British Dictionary definitions for luanda (2 of 2)
Angola
/ (æŋˈɡəʊlə) /
noun
a republic in SW Africa, on the Atlantic: includes the enclave of Cabinda, north of the River Congo; a Portuguese possession from 1575 until its independence in 1975; multiparty constitution adopted in 1991; factional violence. It consists of a narrow coastal plain with a large fertile plateau in the east. Currency: kwanza. Religion: Christian majority. Capital: Luanda. Pop: 18 565 269 (2013 est). Area: 1 246 693 sq km (481 351 sq miles)
Cultural definitions for luanda
Angola
[ (ang-goh-luh) ]
Republic in southwestern Africa on the Atlantic, bordered to the north and northeast by Democratic Republic of Congo, to the east by Zambia, and to the south by Namibia. Its capital and largest city is Luanda.
notes for Angola
After achieving independence from
Portugal in 1976, Angola was the scene of a civil war between its Marxist government, supported by the
Soviet Union and Cuban troops, and a rebel organization known as UNITA, which was aided by the United States and
South Africa. In 1988, the United States engineered a settlement that led to the withdrawal of Cuban troops and to South African acceptance of black majority rule in neighboring Namibia.