montgomery









montgomery


noun

  1. Bernard Law, 1st Viscount Montgomery of AlameinMonty, 1887–1976, British field marshal: World War II commander of British 8th Army in Africa and Europe.
  2. Lucy Maud,1874–1942, Canadian writer, creator of Anne of Green Gables.
  3. Richard,1736–75, American Revolutionary general.
  4. WesJohn Leslie Montgomery, 1925–68, U.S. jazz guitarist.
  5. a city in and the capital of Alabama, in the central part, on the Alabama River.
  6. a town in SW Ohio.
  7. Montgomeryshire.
  8. a male given name.

noun

  1. a state in the SE United States. 51,609 sq. mi. (133,670 sq. km). Capital: Montgomery. Abbreviation: AL (for use with zip code), Ala.
  2. a river flowing SW from central Alabama to the Mobile River. 315 miles (505 km) long.

noun

  1. a city in central Alabama, on the Alabama River: state capital; capital of the Confederacy (1861). Pop: 200 123 (2003 est)

noun

  1. Bernard Law, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, nicknamed Monty. 1887–1976, British field marshal. As commander of the 8th Army in North Africa, he launched the offensive, beginning with the victory at El Alamein (1942), that drove Rommel’s forces back to Tunis. He also commanded the ground forces in the invasion of Normandy (1944) and accepted Germany’s surrender at Lüneburg Heath (May 7, 1945)
  2. L (ucy) M (aud). 1874–1942, Canadian writer; her novels include Anne of Green Gables (1908) and its sequels.

noun

  1. a state of the southeastern US, on the Gulf of Mexico: consists of coastal and W lowlands crossed by the Tombigbee, Black Warrior, and Alabama Rivers, with parts of the Tennessee Valley and Cumberland Plateau in the north; noted for producing cotton and white marble. Capital: Montgomery. Pop: 4 500 752 (2003 est). Area: 131 333 sq km (50 708 sq miles)Abbreviation: Ala, (with zip code) AL
  2. a river in Alabama, flowing southwest to the Mobile and Tensaw Rivers. Length: 507 km (315 miles)

created and named as a U.S. territory 1817 by a division of Mississippi Territory; ultimately named for one of the native peoples who lived there, who speak Muskogean. Their name probably is from a Choctaw term meaning “plant-cutters.” State in the southeastern United States bordered by Tennessee to the north, Georgia to the east, Florida and the Gulf of Mexico to the south, and Mississippi to the west. Its capital is Montgomery, and its largest city is Birmingham.

51 queries 0.564