51³Ô¹Ï

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Midwestern

Rarely Mid·dle West·ern

[mid-wes-tern]

adjective

  1. of or relating to the Midwest.



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51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins

Origin of Midwestern1

An Americanism first recorded in 1905–10
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

It really is something—Ernst has the looks and accent of a Midwestern mom, and you can just feel her exhaustion seep out of her body as she dropped her hand and then drooped her shoulders right before uttering her infamous phrase.

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Almost immediately, Carrie made the character her own, bringing in a sort of aw-shucks Midwestern sweetness.

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Now the formally restless Susan Choi turns to social realism in her beguiling if baggy “Flashlight,“ mapping a family’s journey among political autocracy and personal pain, from Midwestern cornfields to the Pacific Rim.

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There was a Midwestern couple there with their young son and they saw me, and the house manager said, “This couple, they’re going to give us an extra $1,000 if you take a picture with them. Would you mind?â€

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Ronald Reagan had tremendous success as someone who originally came from Midwestern, middle-class roots and then went on to become a very famous, wealthy actor, successfully modeling the character of an average man who achieved an almost royal status in celebrity-mad America.

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When To Use

What does Midwestern mean?

Midwestern is an adjective used to describe the region known as the Midwest—the northern central area of the mainland United States.Generally, the boundaries of the Midwestern region are Canada to the north, the Rocky Mountains to the west, the southern borders of Missouri and Kansas to the south, and the Allegheny Mountains to the east. Sometimes the Midwest is thought of as extending to the eastern border of Illinois or Ohio.The Midwest is one of the United States’ four official regions as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau. Because the Census Bureau doesn’t divide states when defining regions, it sets Ohio as the Midwest’s eastern border. According to the Census, 12 states are located within the Midwest: Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and North Dakota.Americans themselves often differ in terms of which states they consider to be Midwestern. Sometimes, states on the fringes, such as Ohio or North Dakota, aren’t considered to be a part of the Midwest.The word Midwestern is commonly used to describe the region and states in that region, but it can also describe the people who live there or things about them, as in Midwestern values. A person from the Midwest can be called a Midwesterner.Example: I always love to travel to the central United States to see the beautiful scenery of the Midwestern states.

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