Similar words: cartel, a la carte, descartes, carte blanche, artery, barter, starter, quarter. Meaning: ['kɑːtə] n. 1. Englishman and Egyptologist who in 1922 discovered and excavated the tomb of Tutankhamen (1873-1939) 2. 39th President of the United States (1924-) 3. someone whose work is driving carts.
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91. Carter said he sought help in order to save his marriage.
92. One morning he grumbled that she had told him the night before that he was the worst President since Jimmy Carter.
93. On the other hand other close losers, such as Thomas Dewey or Jimmy Carter, faded into the background.
94. Carter was saying all the right things, but his smile was artificial, and I knew I couldn't trust him.
95. While John Carter waited in custody, local police began wondering about the strange disappearance of the farmer's second wife.
96. Which is weird because Carter seems like such a happy guy, a congenial man with a great sense of humor.
97. Carter preferred to put the emphasis on the word separately rather than Defense.
98. There's enough drive and bite here to satisfy even the most cynical that Carter haven't worn themselves thin just yet.
99. Matthews used to jam with drummer Carter Beauford and saxophonist LeRoi Moore.
100. Former President Carter will be the main speaker at the graduation.
101. Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter were in office in conditions far removed from those that prevailed at the beginning of the decade.
102. Carter stuttered as a child and burns now with an eloquence that takes him over from time to time.
103. Carter had worked under James Wyatt, one of the first professional architects to recognize the Gothic style in the eighteenth century.
104. Carter authorized the State Department to try to find another asylum.
105. Carter turned to her with a sadistic glint in his eye.
106. Their efforts got Carter free(Sentence dictionary), long after he'd given up.
107. Successive Democratic presidents built on that idea until it reached its apotheosis under Carter and finally lost public support.
108. Now Carter is on the verge of burning brighter than the Olympic flame.
109. Regulatory policy on carcinogens under President Carter favoured erring on the side of safety.
110. Slowly but surely Carter are on the move again, still pertinent and still clinging to the plot.
111. With almost supernatural inner strength, Washington's Carter retreats into a defiant yet defensive shell of stoicism.
112. Old Mr Carter was convinced that women doctors were inferior to men.
113. Berating Park, Carter threatened to continue the withdrawal despite all opposition and accused his aides of conspiring against him.
114. It seemed like an idea with guaranteed appeal to a human-rights advocate such as Jimmy Carter.
115. Carter ordered the Pentagon to prepare a contingency plan for military action to rescue the hostages.
116. Carter suggests that parents define times for family activities, such as snuggling in bed in the mornings or visiting relatives.
117. Defence counsel William Carter said Gould had been campaigning against drug abuse within the jail.
118. Unfortunately for Carter, Spackerman's evidence of an assault followed by strangulation seemed a complete contradiction of Macarthy's opinion.
119. Convicted of second-degree murder for his role in the crime, Carter is automatically eligible for a parole review after 15 years.
120. Once again, in other words, Carter was seeing dangers that did not exist, while ignoring those that did.
More similar words: cartel, a la carte, descartes, carte blanche, artery, barter, starter, quarter, charter, quarters, quarterback, last quarter, headquarters, first quarter, barter system, close quarters, coronary artery bypass graft, parted, quartet, hearten, cart, artefact, repartee, dishearten, cartoon, carton, heartening, cold-hearted, wholehearted, warmhearted.