Similar words: manual, actuary, estuary, february, obituary, mortuary, sanctuary, sumptuary. Meaning: ['dʒænjʊərɪ] n. the first month of the year; begins 10 days after the winter solstice.
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(181) Borrowers wanting to transfer debts to the egg credit card would pay 2.5 APR on all transfers before January 31, 2001.
(182) On January 12, the local authorities decided that the strike had gone on long enough.
(183) On 16 January 1707 the Treaty of Union received its royal assent.
(184) The rate includes a bonus of 1 per cent until January 27, 2001.
(185) At the conclusion of the Casablanca Conference in January 1943, Roosevelt tried to allay them.
(186) For example, the blizzard hit during the same week the government surveys workers and employers to compile the January employment report.
(187) Mr Slough said trade officials were slow to adopt new export procedures which came into force in January.
(188) In early January, Detroit is truly the center of the automotive universe.
(189) The court was told the charges relate alleged assaults between January 1, 1972, and December 31, 1973.
(190) The newspaper's further claim that the police funded an Inkatha rally in January 1991 was later confirmed officially.
(191) Between January and April it was estimated that 563 government soldiers had been killed in clashes with the guerrillas.
(192) At Perth in January 1313 Bruce himself was second to scale the castle wall after wading neck-high through icy cold water.
(193) They stole my narcissus bulbs that I had been so carefully forcing to bloom in January.
(194) Tragically, or perhaps fortunately, the hunt was aborted by Gaitskell's untimely death in January 1963.
(195) Scarborough magistrates were told that the case involved a large-scale mortgage fraud alleged to have occurred between January 1985 and February 1988.
(196) Those statements were made in an interview in November and a detailed sworn affidavit he had given in January.
(197) Since January 1986 the number of unemployed claimants in the Aberdare travel to work area has fallen by 27 percent.
(198) Employers added 271, 000 jobs, after seasonal adjustment, bringing the increase since January 1996 to almost 3 million.
(199) In theory, logging was suspended by law in January 1990, but it is reported to be continuing apace.
(200) In the first two weeks of January 1992, 18 more people were killed in murders bearing the stamp of death squads.
(201) I can vividly remember the tense atmosphere prevailing amongst all Washington crews during December 1952 and January 1953. Sentencedict.com
(202) If federal approval is gained soon, the trial could start as early as January.
(203) The inveterate entrepreneur and a trio of venture capital firms in January invested $ 5 million in Healthscape Inc.
(204) In January 1858 an attempt was made to assassinate him as he drove with the Empress to the Opera in Paris.
(205) In January of 1691, King William annulled the old Calvert charters.
(206) The move follows the closure of Ferranti International's metrology systems division at Dalkeith in January last year.
(207) In January 1996, McGill disappeared after withdrawing $ 50 from an automatic teller machine.
(208) Mr Kasyanov seems now to be playing for time, hoping to get through January without ferocious clashes with creditors.
(209) The Padstow seafood restaurant owned by celebrity chef Rick Stein has been fully booked since January.
(210) Last January, an appellate court said all proceedings could begin while Clinton held office.
More similar words: manual, actuary, estuary, february, obituary, mortuary, sanctuary, sumptuary, janitor, anus, annual, nuance, peanut, uranus, manure, anuria, annually, clean up, granule, hanukkah, continual, insinuate, attenuate, extenuate, a number of, continually, semiannual, in a nutshell, manuscript, superannuated.