Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- An inlet of the Gulf of St. Lawrence between the Gaspé Peninsula and northern New Brunswick, Canada.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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And ten years later, in July 1534, near Chaleur Bay in northern New Brunswick, the French explorer
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I was standing at the side of the road trying to get a photo of the Restigouche River, which empties into Chaleur Bay, near Dalhousie New Brunsick.
A Man Named Cam McRae Susan 2008
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I was standing at the side of the road trying to get a photo of the Restigouche River, which empties into Chaleur Bay, near Dalhousie New Brunsick.
Archive 2008-08-01 Belinda 2008
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Keeney is like that which caused Skipper Ireson to leave his fellow townsmen to sink in Chaleur Bay.
The Atlantic Book of Modern Plays Eugene O'Neill 1920
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Once more the unfortunate people sought new homes, and found them at last along the banks of Chaleur Bay and of the Madawaska, where thousands of their descendants now rudely cultivate the fields and live happy, contented lives.
The Acadian Exiles : a Chronicle of the Land of Evangeline 1898
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Lescarbot wrote that “the tribes of Gaspé and of Chaleur Bay who are near the 48th parallel of latitude to the south of the great river (St. Lawrence), call themselves Canadaquoa (as they pronounce it), that is to say, Canadaquois as we say” (Histoire de la Nouvelle-France 2:25; Champlain called them Canadiens, and wrote that their customs were the same as those of the Etchemin and Sourquois.
Champlain's Dream David Hackett Fischer 2008
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Lescarbot wrote that “the tribes of Gaspé and of Chaleur Bay who are near the 48th parallel of latitude to the south of the great river (St. Lawrence), call themselves Canadaquoa (as they pronounce it), that is to say, Canadaquois as we say” (Histoire de la Nouvelle-France 2:25; Champlain called them Canadiens, and wrote that their customs were the same as those of the Etchemin and Sourquois.
Champlain's Dream David Hackett Fischer 2008
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a settlement of the marauders on Chaleur Bay, and took three hundred and fifty prisoners to Halifax.
The Acadian Exiles : a Chronicle of the Land of Evangeline 1898
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[Footnote 34: Chaleur Bay on the north-eastern coast of Nova Scotia is probably meant; though, from the changes of names, we have not been able to trace the course of Cartier from the northern extremity of
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