Mid-Atlantic

Proper noun

 * 1) The middle of the East Coast of the United States, typically consisting of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, and Washington, DC.
 * 2) The middle of the Atlantic Ocean.
 * 3) * 1875, Ralph Abercromby, letter to the editor, in Sir Norman Lockyer (editor), Nature, Volume 12, Number 311 (14 October 1875), Macmillan and Co., page 514:
 * Cyclones coming from Labrador work round this hump to the S.E., and die out in mid-Atlantic.
 * : located in, or otherwise relating to, the mid-Atlantic.
 * 1) * 1910, W. H. Holmes, “Some Problems of the American Race”, in American Anthropologist, Volume 12, Number 2 (April–June 1910), the American Anthropological Association, page 173:
 * As they appear today these approaches are first, the north Atlantic chain of islands connecting northern Europe with Labrador; second, the mid-Atlantic currents setting steadily westward from the African coast to South America and the West Indies; third,
 * : half-American, half-European; combining American and European elements.
 * Cyclones coming from Labrador work round this hump to the S.E., and die out in mid-Atlantic.
 * : located in, or otherwise relating to, the mid-Atlantic.
 * 1) * 1910, W. H. Holmes, “Some Problems of the American Race”, in American Anthropologist, Volume 12, Number 2 (April–June 1910), the American Anthropological Association, page 173:
 * As they appear today these approaches are first, the north Atlantic chain of islands connecting northern Europe with Labrador; second, the mid-Atlantic currents setting steadily westward from the African coast to South America and the West Indies; third,
 * : half-American, half-European; combining American and European elements.
 * 1) * 1910, W. H. Holmes, “Some Problems of the American Race”, in American Anthropologist, Volume 12, Number 2 (April–June 1910), the American Anthropological Association, page 173:
 * As they appear today these approaches are first, the north Atlantic chain of islands connecting northern Europe with Labrador; second, the mid-Atlantic currents setting steadily westward from the African coast to South America and the West Indies; third,
 * : half-American, half-European; combining American and European elements.
 * : half-American, half-European; combining American and European elements.
 * : half-American, half-European; combining American and European elements.

Adjective

 * 1) Of or relating to this region.