Proper noun
Mercedes (countable and uncountable, plural Mercedes)
- A female given name from Spanish, equivalent to English Mercy occasionally borrowed from Spanish.
- A place name:
- A city in Buenos Aires province, Argentina.
- A city, the capital of the Mercedes department, Corrientes province, Argentina.
- A department of Corrientes province, Argentina.
- A district of Heredia canton, Heredia province, Costa Rica.
- A municipality in Camarines Norte province, Philippines.
- A municipality in Eastern Samar province, Philippines.
- A city in Hidalgo County, Texas, United States.
- A city, the capital of the Soriano department, Uruguay.
Translations
female given name
- Arabic:
- Hijazi Arabic: مرسيدس f (marsīdis)
- Catalan: Mercè f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 梅塞德斯 (Méisāidésī)
- Finnish: Mercedes
- Hindi: मर्सिडीज़ (marsiḍīz)
- Hungarian: Mercédesz (hu)
- Marathi: मेर्सेदेस f (mersedes)
- Portuguese: please add this translation if you can
- Russian: Мерсе́дес (ru) f (Mɛrsɛ́dɛs)
- Spanish: Mercedes (es) f
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Noun
Mercedes (plural Mercedes or Mercedeses)
- Clipping of Mercedes-Benz, a car manufactured by Mercedes-Benz.
- Synonyms: Benz, Mercedes-Benz
1989 November, Christopher Dickey, “At the Ali Baba Café”, in Vanity Fair, volume 52, number 11, New York, N.Y.: The Condé Nast Publications Inc., →ISSN, page 240:On a bridge that leads from Nile Street to the café in Tahrir Square where [Naguib] Mahfouz takes his morning coffee, there is often a beggar working his way among cars stuck in the city’s perpetual traffic jam. One of his legs is missing, and he hops up to the windows of the Mercedeses and Fiats on his remaining, bare foot.
2015 July, J. R. Ward [pseudonym; Jessica Rowley Pell Bird Blakemore], chapter 31, in The Bourbon Kings, New York, N.Y.: New American Library, →ISBN, page 273:Samuel T. blew off the line-up of sheep at the base of Easterly’s hill, shooting his Jag around the Mercedeses, Audis, Porsches, and limos, and waving at the parkers who tried to flag him down so he’d stop.
2018, Keith Gessen, A Terrible Country: A Novel, New York, N.Y.: Viking, →ISBN, page 322:Anton and I saw each of them pull up in their Mercedeses and BMWs and park quasi-legally within a convenient distance of the diner.
References
Michelle Krebs (2001 October 19) “Her Name Still Rings A Bell”, in New York Times: “Jellinek agreed to order 36 cars if they bore the name of his daughter -- and if the factory gave him an exclusive sales agency for America and parts of Europe. Daimler agreed.”