MAROONING - significado y definición. Qué es MAROONING
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Qué (quién) es MAROONING - definición

PUNISHMENT FOR SAILORS AT SEA

Marooning         
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Maroon.
maroon         
  • The word "maroon" derives from the French ''marron'', meaning chestnut.
BROWNISH-RED COLOR
Maroon (colour); DarkRed; Darkred; UP Maroon; Maroon red; Maroon (color); Dark red; Brick red; 800000; Dark Red
maroon1
¦ noun
1. a dark brownish-red colour.
2. chiefly Brit. a firework that makes a loud bang, used as a signal or warning.
Origin
C17 (in the sense 'chestnut'): from Fr. marron 'chestnut'; sense 2 is so named because the firework makes the noise of a chestnut bursting in the fire.
--------
maroon2
¦ verb abandon (someone) alone in an inaccessible place, especially an island.
Origin
C18: from Maroon.
Maroons         
  • Ndyuka]] man bringing the body of a child before a [[shaman]]. Suriname, 1955
  • Maroon flag in [[Freetown]], Sierra Leone
  • Maroon village, [[Suriname River]], 1955
  • 1801 [[aquatint]] of a maroon raid on the Dromilly estate, Jamaica, during the Second Maroon War of 1795–1796.
  • Maroon men in Suriname, picture taken between 1910 and 1935
  • ''Maroons surprised by dogs'' (1893) (Brussels) by [[Louis Samain]].
AFRICAN REFUGEES WHO ESCAPED FROM SLAVERY IN THE AMERICAS, AND THEIR DESCENDANTS
Mawon; Mowan; Cimaroons; Haitian Maroon; Maroon (slavery); Bush Negroes; Bush Negro; Bush Negroe; Bush Negros; Bushi-Nenge; Bushee Negro; Djukas; Cimarrons; Haitian maroon; Haïtian Maroon; Maroon people; Maroon (people); Maroons (people); Maroon Communities; Maroon communities; Cimarrónes; Maroon society; Cimarrones; Bush negroes; Bushnegroes; Maroon community
Maroons are descendants of Africans in the Americas who formed settlements away from slavery. They often mixed with indigenous peoples, eventually evolving into separate creole cultures such as the Garifuna and the Mascogos.

Wikipedia

Marooning

Marooning is the intentional act of abandoning someone in an uninhabited area, such as a desert island, or more generally (usually in passive voice) to be marooned is to be in a place from which one cannot escape. The word is attested in 1699, and is derived from the term maroon, a word for a fugitive slave, which could be a corruption of Spanish cimarrón (rendered as "symeron" in 16th–17th century English), meaning a household animal (or slave) who has "run wild".

The practice was a penalty for crewmen, or for captains at the hands of a crew in cases of mutiny. Generally, a marooned man was set on a deserted island, often no more than a sand bar at low tide. He would be given some food, a container of water, and a loaded pistol so he could die by suicide if he desired. The outcome of marooning was usually fatal, but William Greenaway and some men loyal to him survived being marooned, as did pirate captain Edward England.

The chief practitioners of marooning were 17th and 18th century pirates, to such a degree that they were frequently referred to as "marooners". The pirate articles of captains Bartholomew Roberts and John Phillips specify marooning as a punishment for cheating one's fellow pirates or other offences. In this context, to be marooned is euphemistically to be "made governor of an island".

During the late-18th century in the US South, "marooning" took on a humorous additional meaning describing an extended camping-out picnic over a period of several days.

Ejemplos de uso de MAROONING
1. Rising water had blocked the only road into the small hamlet of Georgetown, Ark., population 126, marooning residents for as long as a week.
2. In Trinidad, widespread flooding triggered landslides that cut off the only access road to two east coast communities, marooning hundreds of residents.
3. In Trinidad, widespread flooding triggered landslides that cut off the only access road to two east coast communities, marooning hundreds of residents, Mayor Eustace Nancis said.
4. I imagine my ancestors felt the same way oh so long ago, in 1848, after the newly drawn border cut through their lands, marooning them in a netherworld with Mexico on one side, the United States on the other.
5. In Arizona, a more than 31,000–acre wildfire north of Grand Canyon National Park jumped the only highway leading to the remote North Rim, closing the road and marooning hundreds of tourists and workers.