Seneca
1
[ sen-i-kuh ]
/ ˈsɛn ɪ kə /
noun, plural Sen·e·cas, (especially collectively) Sen·e·ca for 1.
a member of the largest tribe of the Iroquois Confederacy of North American Indians, formerly inhabiting western New York and being conspicuous in the wars south and west of Lake Erie.
an Iroquoian language of the Seneca, Onondaga, and Cayuga tribes.
Origin of Seneca
1
From the New York Dutch word
Sennecaas, etc., orig. applied to the Oneida and, more generally, to all the Upper Iroquois (as opposed to the Mohawk), probably < an unattested Mahican name
OTHER WORDS FROM Seneca
Sen·e·can, adjectiveDefinition for seneca (2 of 2)
Seneca
2
[ sen-i-kuh ]
/ ˈsɛn ɪ kə /
noun
Lucius An·nae·us
[uh-nee-uh s] /əˌni əs/,c4 b.c.–a.d. 65,
Roman philosopher and writer of tragedies.
Example sentences from the Web for seneca
British Dictionary definitions for seneca (1 of 2)
Seneca
1
/ (ˈsɛnɪkə) /
noun
plural -cas or -ca
a member of a North American Indian people formerly living south of Lake Ontario; one of the Iroquois peoples
the language of this people, belonging to the Iroquoian family
Word Origin for Seneca
C19: from Dutch
Sennecaas (plural), probably of Algonquian origin
British Dictionary definitions for seneca (2 of 2)
Seneca
2
/ (ˈsɛnɪkə) /
noun
Lucius Annaeus (əˈniːəs), called the Younger. ?4 bc –65 ad, Roman philosopher, statesman, and dramatist; tutor and adviser to Nero. He was implicated in a plot to murder Nero and committed suicide. His works include Stoical essays on ethical subjects and tragedies that had a considerable influence on Elizabethan drama
his father, Marcus (ˈmɑːkəs) or Lucius Annaeus, called the Elder or the Rhetorician. ?55 bc –?39 ad, Roman writer on oratory and history