Vectensian
English
Adjective
Vectensian (not comparable)
- of or from the Isle of Wight.
- 1800, The Monthly Visitor, and Entertaining Pocket Companion, page 379:
- This probability is strengthened by the enthusiastic praises Wilkes always bestowed on the native charms of the lower class of Vectensian females; and in his hours of levity with the companions of his gallantries, he always distinguished it by the name of Cyprus.
- 1969, Poetry Review, page 56:
- Of a similar type, but dealing with a less cultivated, less fertile field, is the anthology of Vectensian verse, Poets of the Wight, compiled by Charles J. Arnell.
- 1988, Nicholas Parsons, The Joy of Bad Verse, HarperCollins:
- Equally satisfying to the connoisseur is the poem Cupid and Euphrospie by Percy Goddard Stone, a Vectensian poet whose work never really made it on the mainland.
Noun
Vectensian (plural Vectensians)
- someone from the Isle of Wight
- 1914, John Morgan Richards, Almost Fairyland, personal notes concerning the Isle of Wight:
- I have never been able to appreciate nor to understand why it is that Vectensians are constantly challenged to explain why they live in the Isle of Wight at all.
- 2007, Mark Gardiner, “The” Archaeological Journal, →ISBN, page 13:
- In reality, a readily agreed confederation seems the most likely course for Vectensians in AD 43.
- 2019, Skye Smith, Knut - Forkbeard's Peace: Novel Four of the Knut Series by Skye Smith, Skye Smith, →ISBN:
- The Isle of Wight had been a winter port for Danish and Norse ships off and on for a century or more, and during this decade the Vectensians had begun to welcome visits by such ships.
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