2012年9月24日 星期一

Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: Citations:Cascadian

Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]
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Citations:Cascadian
Sep 25th 2012, 03:33

Created page with "{{citation|Cascadian}} ===Adjective: "of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the Cascade Range or the Cascade region of North America"=== {{timeline| 1900s=1995| 2000s=2006 ..."

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{{citation|Cascadian}} ===Adjective: "of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the Cascade Range or the Cascade region of North America"=== {{timeline| 1900s=1995| 2000s=2006 2009}} * '''1995''' — Stephen Blank & Jerry Haar, ''Making NAFTA Work: U.S. Firms and the New North American Business Environment'', North-South Center Press (1998), ISBN 1574540475, page 78: *: A "'''Cascadian'''" lifestyle, for example, seems to characterize North America's Pacific Northwest — which includes Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia. * '''2006''' — Irwin Redlener, ''Americans at Risk: Why We Are Not Prepared for Megadisasters and What We Can Do'', Knopf (2006), ISBN 9780307265265, [http://books.google.com/books?id=yEjLsf2viokC&pg=PA47 page 47]: *: Though not capable of releasing as much total energy as a '''Cascadian''' quake, a large quake on the Seattle Fault could be much more damaging to the city it is named after because the fault is shallower and closer to where the city is built. * '''2009''' — Michael Welland, ''Sand: The Never-Ending Story'', University of California Press (2009), ISBN 9780520254374, [http://books.google.com/books?id=RwAHE18nioMC&pg=PA194 page 194]: *: All the evidence, starting with the layer or sand, points to a '''Cascadian''' earthquake during the night of January 26, potentially as big as the Sumatran one of 2004. ===Noun: "a resident of the Cascade region of North America"=== {{timeline| 1900s=2000| 2000s=2005 2006 2007 2011}} * '''2000''' — Todd Dalotto, ''The Hemp Cookbook: From Seed to Shining Seed'', Healing Arts Press (2000), ISBN 0892817879, [http://books.google.com/books?id=awBRU4530SoC&pg=PA105 page 105]: *: '''Cascadians''' tend to grow a highbush blueberry that yields huge, juicy fruits. Areas of the Northwest are rapidly gaining respect as fantastic wine regions. * '''2005''' — Steve Solomon, ''Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times'', New Society Publishers (2005), ISBN 9780865715530, [http://books.google.com/books?id=lbohaJCxFnAC&pg=PA116 page 116]: *: Non-'''Cascadians''' should be aware that some varieties on its website, eminently suited to winter gardening west of the Cascades, are too slow to mature before winter freezes the garden east of the Cascades. * '''2006''' — Eric Peterson, ''Ramble: A Field Guide to the U.S.A.'', speck press (2006), ISBN 1933108088, [http://books.google.com/books?id=_n3X-MS4IoUC&pg=PA28 page 28]: *: Pacific Northwesterners, sometimes called '''Cascadians''', are so laid back that it's hard to tell if anyone actually works up here. * '''2007''' — Reginald C. Stuart, ''Dispersed Relations: Americans and Canadians in Upper North America'', Woodrow Wilson Center Press (2007), ISBN 9780801887857, [http://books.google.com/books?id=eMPtAAAAMAAJ&q=%22cascadians%22 page 270]: *: '''Cascadians''' gathered enough political strength in Congress to defeat proposed border-crossing fees, and they got approval for dedicated commuter lanes and smart cards to speed transit at the Peace Arch crossing. * '''2007''' — ''Cascadia Scorecard: Seven Key Trends Shaping the Northwest'', Sightline Institute (2007), ISBN 9781886093171, [http://books.google.com/books?id=Sr2ZI1RLpKoC&q=%22Cascadians+can+increase+efficiency+in+cars,%22&dq=%22Cascadians+can+increase+efficiency+in+cars,%22 page 29]: *: To improve this trend, '''Cascadians''' can increase efficiency in cars, lighting, and appliances, and accelerate the growth of transit-and pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods. * '''2011''' — Matthew Klingle, "Fishy Thinking: Salmon and the Persistence of History in Urban Environmental Politics", in ''Cities and Nature in the American West'' (ed. Char Miller), University of Nevada Press (2010), ISBN 9780874178241, [http://books.google.com/books?id=NGMlE6_16QUC&pg=PA81 page 81]: *: A wealthy real estate developer and former University of Washington dean, Schell {{…}} was a fervent backer of "Cascadia," an invented region running from the Oregon-California border to southern British Columbia. He believed that '''Cascadians''' were "united by a love of the outdoors and reverence for the environment passed to us from the native people."

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