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List of Brazil state name etymologies

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The names of most Brazilian states are based on Portuguese placenames, while others are based on indigenous (often Tupi–Guarani) and a few European languages.

State name Language of origin Source word Meaning and Notes
Acre from a misspelling of Aquiri, a local river; not from acre (a measurement of area)
Alagoas Portuguese plural of alagoa, a flooded field or swamp
Amapá Aruak amapá "the land in the end" (documented in Sir Walter Raleigh's account of Guyana as Land of Amapaia)
Amazonas Spanish after the Amazon river, which was named by Spanish explorers who heard rumors that Amazons ("female mounted warriors", possibly from the Iranian ethnonym *ha-mazan-, "warriors"; former supposed etimology—Greek α-μαστός a- mastos, "with no breasts"— is considered false etymology) guarded the legendary city of El Dorado in the middle of the forest
Bahia Old Portuguese bahia bay or harbor; the colonial province was called Bahia de Todos os Santos (All Saints Bay), because it was discovered on November 1, All Saints Day
Ceará Tupi sy ara "mother of the day" or "source of light", because it is a sunny land with sparse vegetation (therefore, few shadows)
Espírito Santo Portuguese "Holy Ghost/Spirit"
Goiás Goyaz Apparently, the name originated from the name of Tupi goiaiase nation that occupied the region in the late 16th century the term gwa ya mean "equal individual " , and therefore able to be friends .
Maranhão Spanish Portuguese spelling of Marañón, another name for the Amazon River; from 1621 to 1709, the north of Brazil was styled the State of Maranhão, with its capital at São Luís
Mato Grosso Portuguese Matto Grosso "thick grass" or "dense woods"
Mato Grosso do Sul Portuguese a new state created in 1975 from the southern part of Mato Grosso state
Minas Gerais early modern Portuguese Minas Geraes "General Mines"; separated from São Paulo in 1709 and placed under the direct control of the Portuguese Crown as the Captaincy of São Paulo and the Mines, after the discovery of gold, diamonds, and gems in the territory
Pará Tupi–Guarani pará river; probably because of the estuary of the Amazon River. The Pará River, near the state capital Belém, would be "River River".
Paraíba Old Tupi Parahiba pará (river) + aíba (rough, bad), probably meaning "rough river"
Paraná Guarani paraná "wide river"; the words for "river", "large river", "lagoon", "sea" and "lake" have different meanings in Tupi, leading to confusion that Paraná meant sea
Pernambuco Tupi paranã (sea) + mbuka (hollow), referring to the coastal reefs; the state capital, Recife, is derived from the Portuguese for reef
Piauí Tupi Piauhi piau (a type of river fish) and y (river), so Piau Fish River
Rio de Janeiro Portuguese "River of January"; the city harbor was discovered on January 1, 1502, and was believed to be the mouth of a river (such as the Tagus estuary which forms a bay by Lisbon). The state was named after the city, now its capital and formerly capital of Brazil.
Rio Grande do Norte Portuguese "Great River of the North"
Rio Grande do Sul Portuguese "Great River of the South"; the long and narrow Patos Lagoon (lagoon of the ducks) was probably mistaken for a river; thus the name of the first important settlement, the town of Rio Grande
Rondônia after Marshal Cândido Rondon, explorer of the region; the old name for the state was Guaporé, Tupi for "pathway to the lake"
Roraima Yanomami roro imã "thundering mountain" according to some sources; the old name for the state was Rio Branco, Portuguese for "white river"
Santa Catarina Portuguese Santa Catharina after Saint Catherine of Alexandria
São Paulo Portuguese after the Jesuit monastery of São Paulo dos Campos de Piratininga (Saint Paul of the Fields of Piratininga), built to Christianize native peoples; the state was named after its capital
Sergipe Tupi after the name of a native chief, Serijipe; another possible origin is from the Tupi siri jibe, a "brook with crabs"
Tocantins Tupi tukan (toucan, a South American bird) + tin (nose), or nose of toucan; the confluence of the Araguaia and Tocantins rivers is shaped like a bird's beak; the region is also named "Bico do Papagaio" (Parrot Beak), however, the river had this name long before maps revealed the shape of the confluence
Distrito Federal Portuguese lit. "Federal District"; formerly the municipal territory of the national capital was called either Município Neutro (Neutral Municipality, from 1834 to 1889), Corte Imperial (Imperial Court, from 1822 to 1834) or Capital Federal (Federal Capital, from 1889 to 1934)

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References