Churchill









Churchill


Churchill [chur-chil, -chuh l] Examples noun

  1. Caryl,born 1938, English playwright and feminist theorist.
  2. John, 1st Duke of Marlborough,Corporal John, 1650–1722, British military commander.
  3. Lord Randolph (Henry Spencer),1849–95, British statesman (father of Winston L. S. Churchill).
  4. Winston,1871–1947, U.S. novelist.
  5. Sir Winston (Leonard Spencer),1874–1965, British statesman and author: prime minister 1940–45, 1951–55; Nobel Prize in Literature 1953.
  6. Mount, a mountain in S Alaska, in the Wrangell Mountains. 15,638 feet (4766 meters).
  7. a river in Canada, flowing NE from E Saskatchewan through Manitoba to Hudson Bay. About 1000 miles (1600 km) long.
  8. Also called Churchill River. Formerly Hamilton River. a river in SW Labrador, Newfoundland, in E Canada, flowing SE and N through Lake Melville to the Atlantic Ocean. About 600 miles (965 km) long.
  9. a seaport and railway terminus in NE Manitoba, on Hudson Bay at the mouth of this river.

Examples from the Web for churchill Contemporary Examples of churchill

  • Following her upbringing at Chartwell, the Churchill family home in Kent, Mary Soames, according to Emma Soames, had “a good war.”

    Churchill’s Secret Treasures for Sale: A British PM’s Life on the Auction Block

    Tom Teodorczuk

    December 8, 2014

  • But perhaps the most spectacular lot in the sale is a silver jug, a birthday present to Churchill from his War Cabinet in 1942.

    Churchill’s Secret Treasures for Sale: A British PM’s Life on the Auction Block

    Tom Teodorczuk

    December 8, 2014

  • Artists and Churchill, in the right circumstances, got on like a house on fire.

    Churchill’s Secret Treasures for Sale: A British PM’s Life on the Auction Block

    Tom Teodorczuk

    December 8, 2014

  • To him, Churchill “was radical precisely because he was conservative” and “essentially a buccaneering Victorian Whig.”

    Boris Johnson’s Churchill Man Crush

    Michael F. Bishop

    November 22, 2014

  • Churchill said that meeting Franklin Roosevelt was like opening a bottle of Champagne—and so is reading The Churchill Factor.

    Boris Johnson’s Churchill Man Crush

    Michael F. Bishop

    November 22, 2014

  • Historical Examples of churchill

  • He was born in 1769, the son of a yeoman farmer at Churchill, in Oxfordshire.

    Self-Help

    Samuel Smiles

  • Miss Churchill lost her seat, screamed out, and fell from her horse.

    The Memoirs of Count Grammont, Complete

    Anthony Hamilton

  • Hogarth quarrelled with Churchill, and drew him as a bear in canonicals.

    Leading Articles on Various Subjects

    Hugh Miller

  • Myself, I regard Churchill as a man with a real touch of genius.

    War Letters of a Public-School Boy

    Paul Jones.

  • So Churchill has once again leapt to the fore as a critic of the Army.

    War Letters of a Public-School Boy

    Paul Jones.

  • British Dictionary definitions for churchill Churchill 1 noun

    1. a river in E Canada, rising in SE Labrador and flowing north and southeast over Churchill Falls, then east to the Atlantic. Length: about 1000 km (600 miles)Former name: Hamilton River
    2. a river in central Canada, rising in NW Saskatchewan and flowing east through several lakes to Hudson Bay. Length: about 1600 km (1000 miles)

    Churchill 2 noun

    1. Caryl. born 1938, British playwright; her plays include Cloud Nine (1978), Top Girls (1982), Serious Money (1987), and Far Away (2000)
    2. Charles. 1731–64, British poet, noted for his polemical satires. His works include The Rosciad (1761) and The Prophecy of Famine (1763)
    3. John. See (1st Duke of) Marlborough 2
    4. Lord Randolph. 1849–95, British Conservative politician: secretary of state for India (1885–86) and chancellor of the Exchequer and leader of the House of Commons (1886)
    5. his son, Sir Winston (Leonard Spencer). 1874–1965, British Conservative statesman, orator, and writer, noted for his leadership during World War II. He held various posts under both Conservative and Liberal governments, including 1st Lord of the Admiralty (1911–15), before becoming prime minister (1940–45; 1951–55). His writings include The World Crisis (1923–29), Marlborough (1933–38), The Second World War (1948–54), and History of the English-Speaking Peoples (1956–58): Nobel prize for literature 1953
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