Lloyd









Lloyd


Lloyd [loid] Examples noun

  1. Welsh Legend. Llwyd.
  2. Harold (Clay·ton) [kleyt-n] /ˈkleɪt n/, 1894–1971, U.S. actor.
  3. (John) Sel·wyn (Brooke) [sel-win] /ˈsɛl wɪn/, 1904–78, British statesman.
  4. a male given name: from a Welsh word meaning “gray.”

Lloyd’s [loidz] noun

  1. an association of independent English insurance underwriters, founded in London about 1688, originally engaged in underwriting only marine risks but now also issuing policies on almost every type of insurance.

Origin of Lloyd’s named after Edward Lloyd, 17th-century owner of a London coffeehouse that was frequented by insurers against sea risk Examples from the Web for lloyd Contemporary Examples of lloyd

  • Lloyd Doggett from Texas was from Texas, which was its own country.

    Southern Dems Won’t Rise Again

    Ben Jacobs

    December 5, 2014

  • Lobbyist Lloyd Hand, a former aide to Lyndon Johnson, flitted from conversation to conversation.

    Kissy-Face The Nation: Washington’s Power Elite Smooch Bob Schieffer

    Lloyd Grove

    November 18, 2014

  • Michael Bloomberg, Lloyd Blankfein, Jamie Dimon—with a little Clint Eastwood on the side.

    Inside New York’s Most Powerful Diner

    Tom Teodorczuk

    October 31, 2014

  • As the wrangling continued, Lloyd and Postol grew to rely on their new colleague, Susli.

    The Kardashian Look-Alike Trolling for Assad

    Noah Shachtman, Michael Kennedy

    October 17, 2014

  • After the August 21 attacks in Syria, Postol and Lloyd decided to launch an investigation into what happened there.

    The Kardashian Look-Alike Trolling for Assad

    Noah Shachtman, Michael Kennedy

    October 17, 2014

  • Historical Examples of lloyd

  • Put a clean dress on Lloyd if you are going to take her out.

    The Little Colonel

    Annie Fellows Johnston

  • Lloyd clapped her hands and spun around the room like a top.

    The Little Colonel

    Annie Fellows Johnston

  • He was convinced by what she told him that both Lloyd and her mother were unduly alarmed.

    The Little Colonel

    Annie Fellows Johnston

  • As soon as Lloyd began to realize what was happening, her face grew radiant.

    The Little Colonel

    Annie Fellows Johnston

  • What a comfort she has been all my life, first as my nurse, and now as Lloyd’s!

    The Little Colonel

    Annie Fellows Johnston

  • British Dictionary definitions for lloyd Lloyd noun

    1. Clive (Hubert). born 1944, West Indian (Guyanese) cricketer; played in 110 tests (1966–84), scoring 7,515 runs; captained the West Indies in 74 tests and to two World Cup wins (1975, 1979)
    2. Harold (Clayton). 1893–1971, US comic film actor
    3. Marie, real name Matilda Alice Victoria Wood. 1870–1922, English music-hall entertainer

    Lloyd’s noun

    1. an association of London underwriters, set up in the late 17th century. Originally concerned exclusively with marine insurance and a shipping information service, it now subscribes a variety of insurance policies and publishes a daily list (Lloyd’s List) of shipping data and news

    Word Origin for Lloyd’s C17: named after Edward Lloyd (died ?1726) at whose coffee house in London the underwriters originally carried on their business Word Origin and History for lloyd Lloyd

    male proper name, from Welsh Llwyd, literally “gray,” from PIE *pel- “pale” (see pallor). Lloyd’s, meaning the London-based association of marine underwriters, is first recorded as such 1805, from Lloyd’s Coffee House, Tower Street, London, opened in 1688 by Edward Lloyd, who supplied shipping information to his patrons.

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