Associations to the word «Seneca»
Noun
- Mohawk
- Nero
- Shawnee
- Cicero
- Ovid
- Falls
- Pliny
- Plutarch
- Lucius
- Mott
- Yates
- Erie
- Claudius
- Confederacy
- Stanton
- Niagara
- Salamanca
- Turnpike
- Huron
- Reservation
- Tragedy
- Socrates
- Virgil
- Allegheny
- Epistle
- Brant
- Piper
- Orator
- Cherokee
- Plato
- Aristotle
- Cato
- Watkins
- Pontiac
- Potomac
- Suffrage
- Terence
- Philosopher
- Philo
- Ny
- Seminole
- Highlands
- Waterloo
- Horace
- Buffalo
- Knob
- Galen
- Rebirth
- Susquehanna
- Encampment
- Cassius
- Tribe
- Phelps
- Indian
- Erasmus
- Fayette
- Rochester
- Tiberius
- Humanist
- Aqueduct
- Convention
- Pendleton
- Delaware
- Tabernacle
- Corsica
- Hercules
- Dramatist
- Champlain
- Eloquence
- Casino
- Tutor
- Younger
- Wallace
- Lucian
- Neutral
- Ontario
- Portage
- Geneva
- Consolation
- Elder
- Meadows
- Marcus
- Douglass
- Hamlet
- Pseudo
- Nation
- Lake
- Sandstone
- Ohio
- Syracuse
- Marcia
- Greenville
Verb
Adverb
Wiktionary
SENECA, proper noun. A Roman cognomen, notably borne by Lucius Annaeus Seneca, a Roman stoic philosopher, dramatist, and statesman.
SENECA, proper noun. A tribe of native Americans in western New York state.
SENECA, proper noun. The Iroquoian language of the Seneca.
SENECA, proper noun. A town in Ontario County, New York, in the United States.
SENECA, noun. A person of Seneca heritage.
SENECA ROOT, noun. A plant of the species Polygala senega
Dictionary definition
SENECA, noun. Roman statesman and philosopher who was an advisor to Nero; his nine extant tragedies are modeled on Greek tragedies (circa 4 BC - 65 AD).
SENECA, noun. A member of the Iroquoian people formerly living in New York State south of Lake Ontario.
SENECA, noun. The Iroquoian language spoken by the Seneca.
Wise words
Strong and bitter words indicate a weak cause.