Zambia

[ zam-bee-uh ]
/ ˈzæm bi ə /

noun

a republic in S Africa: formerly a British protectorate and part of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland; gained independence 1964; a member of the Commonwealth of Nations. 288,130 sq. mi. (746,256 sq. km). Capital: Lusaka.
Formerly Northern Rhodesia.

OTHER WORDS FROM Zambia

Zam·bi·an, adjective, noun

Example sentences from the Web for zambian

British Dictionary definitions for zambian (1 of 2)

Zambian
/ (ˈzæmbɪən) /

adjective

of or relating to Zambia or its inhabitants

noun

a native or inhabitant of Zambia

British Dictionary definitions for zambian (2 of 2)

Zambia
/ (ˈzæmbɪə) /

noun

a republic in southern Africa: an early site of human settlement; controlled by the British South Africa Company by 1900 and unified as Northern Rhodesia in 1911; made a British protectorate in 1924; part of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland (1953–63), gaining independence as a member of the Commonwealth in 1964; important mineral exports, esp copper. Official language: English. Religion: Christian majority, animist minority. Currency: kwacha. Capital: Lusaka. Pop: 14 222 233 (2013 est). Area: 752 617 sq km (290 587 sq miles) Former name (until 1964): Northern Rhodesia

Cultural definitions for zambian

Zambia

Republic in central Africa, bordered by the Democratic Republic of Congo to the north; Tanzania to the northeast; Malawi and Mozambique to the east; Zimbabwe, Botswana, and Namibia to the south; and Angola to the west. Lusaka is the capital and largest city.

notes for Zambia

British explorer David Livingstone first visited Zambia in 1851.

notes for Zambia

Zambia was proclaimed independent from British control in 1964. From 1953 to 1964, it was federated with Rhodesia (then Southern Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe) as Northern Rhodesia.

notes for Zambia

In the 1970s, Zambia supported the movement for black majority rule in Rhodesia.