The coolest girl in the universe and the hottest babe around! Sweet, sensitive, sexy, super duper. Makes up words and doesn't care what people think and rocks at writing.
by Acacia April 17, 2005
Get the acacia mug.Party animals that live in New-Brunswick Canada and drink all night and party till they can no longer stand up. They comonly speak in French, English and most often Chiac
by ME.0 May 11, 2011
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by Franz May 7, 2005
Get the acacia mug.The most brutally amazing hardcore band you will listen to. An intense and energetic live show and band members with a good sense of humor. Not to mention that sex appeal.
Listening to The Acacia Strain, you'll want to tattoo} their lyrics on you and dream about Vincent in your sleep.
by o sht kirstyn March 24, 2009
Get the The Acacia Strain mug.Acadian Cajuns are the descendants of a group of French-speaking settlers who migrated from coastal France in the late sixteenth century to establish a French colony called Acadia in the maritime provinces of Canada and part of what is now the state of Maine. Forced out by the British in the mid-sixteenth century, a few settlers remained in Maine, but most resettled in southern Louisiana and are popularly known as Cajuns Studies indicate that between 1654 and 1755, the Acadian population grew from 300-350 colonists to about 12,000-15,000 (despite a 50% child mortality rate). Alot of ethnic diversity existed among the Acadian Cajuns (a few were of melanated american Indian, English, Scottish, Irish, Spanish, Basque, origin).
Today, common understanding holds that Cajuns are Caucasian and Creoles are melanated or multicultural; Creoles are from New Orleans, while Cajuns populate the rural parts of South Louisiana. In fact, the two cultures are far more related—historically, geographically, and genealogically—than most people realize.
Today, common understanding holds that Cajuns are Caucasian and Creoles are melanated or multicultural; Creoles are from New Orleans, while Cajuns populate the rural parts of South Louisiana. In fact, the two cultures are far more related—historically, geographically, and genealogically—than most people realize.
Acadian Cajuns, enslaved american Indians, Houma, Chitimacha, Choctaw, German immigrants, Canadian trappers, French and Spanish settlers—all contributed to a process now known as creolization. Fueled by European colonialism and the American aboriginal slave trade founded by the American colonization society creolization occurred throughout the Latin Caribbean world: different populations, most of them in lands new to them, blended their indigenous cultural practices—culinary,linguistic, musical—to create new cultural forms. Gumbo drew upon West African and American Indian sources (okra and rice from the former; Filé, or crushed Sassafras leaves, from the latter) and French culinary techniques (Roux). Creolized French—Kouri-Vini, also known as Louisiana Creole—was, by the 1800s, in wide practice, including among Acadian descendants. The accordion, a star feature of both Cajun and zydeco music, was brought to the colony by German settlers, and its use was popularized in part by the enslaved people working those plantations.
by Desert flower September 21, 2023
Get the Acadian Cajuns mug.Term used to describe a friend made at any type of Academy. Can also be used as a suffix at the end of some names, normally ending in 'a' or 'c.'
by N9netySe7en August 31, 2011
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