The name means "green mountains".
le Vermont is a village of some 20 homes southwest of Strasbourg, France.
Vermont is grammatically correct, and it is singular. It does mean Green Mountain, if you check back a few centuries in old french. In modern french, of course, one could say it is "grammatically incorrect." But this is a very old village.
I believe, that, when it was a French territory it received that name. The words Vert= Green and Mont= Mountain in French therefore making the name of the state "the Green Mountains"Also it is known for its large forests.
Vermont got its name historically from the French.It was originally Vert-mont witch means "green mountain" that's why its nick name is "The green mountains" and their state song is "These green mountains".
the green mountain boys got their name from the green mountains in vermont.
the founder of vermont is Ronald Reagan
The Vermont General Assembly.
Burlington , Vermont. Largest city in State. Burlington and Rutland are the only above 15,000 in Vermont.
Vermont
The original name of Mt. Vermont is St. Vermont Mt.
State of Vermont.
The Vermont State House.
Montpelier is the capital city in Vermont.
VT or Vt. are the abbreviations for Vermont. The University of Vermont uses the abbreviation UVM from their Latin name.
Jay Peak in Jay, Vermont
Yes, Vermont is a proper noun, the name of a state. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; Vermont is the name of a place. Proper nouns are always capitalized.
Zephyr Road is the name of a street in Williston, Vermont.
It's just Vermont because it's the name of something
Vermont; vert meaning "green" and mont meaning "mount".
From the French word "vert" and "mont" meaning "These Green Mountains"
The Green Mountains are a mountain range in the state of Vermont.