Willard [wil-erd] Examples noun
- Emma (Hart),1787–1870, U.S. educator and poet.
- Frances Elizabeth Caroline,1839–98, U.S. educator, reformer, and author.
- Jess,1883–1968, U.S. boxer: world heavyweight champion 1915–19.
- a male given name: from Germanic words meaning “hardy” and “will.”
Examples from the Web for willard Contemporary Examples of willard
I will now confess that I spent some time in the lobby of the Willard Hotel myself.
Up to a Point: In Defense of Lobbyists
P. J. O’Rourke
October 25, 2014
And – although we did not go to the Willard Hotel – the subject of lobbyists did come up.
Up to a Point: In Defense of Lobbyists
P. J. O’Rourke
October 25, 2014
Willard—and his “binders full of women”—alas, remains a mystery.
Inside ‘Mitt,’ Netflix’s All-Access Mitt Romney Documentary
Marlow Stern
January 17, 2014
I call the chapter “Willard M. Romney and the Truman Show of Bubble Finance.”
David Stockman on ‘The Great Deformation’ and Our Economic Doom
Daniel Gross
April 1, 2013
Willard Mitt Romney stood on the verge of ultimate power as leader of the free world.
Mitt Romney’s Fast Fade After Losing the 2012 Presidential Race
Lauren Ashburn
November 8, 2012
Historical Examples of willard
The separators are the standard Willard “Threaded Rubber” separators.
The Automobile Storage Battery
O. A. Witte
The Willard “A” battery, Fig. 165, is an all-rubber battery.
The Automobile Storage Battery
O. A. Witte
We drove to the Willard and talked and smoked, and got ready for dinner.
Mark Twain, A Biography, 1835-1910, Complete
Albert Bigelow Paine
They are not at Willard’s, says the clerk, when Major Abbot arrives and makes his inquiries.
Charles King
It is late that evening when Major Abbot returns to Willard’s.
Charles King