Similar words: unnamed, namedrop, name-dropping, name, names, byname, enamel, rename. Meaning: [neɪmd] adj. 1. given or having a specified name 2. bearing the author's name.
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121. Its sponsor, a local arts patron named Clara Bates, befriended the teenager and installed him in her carriage house.
122. The lectures are named in his honour and organisers hope to attract big names in the future.
123. But a permanent successor probably will not be named until July or August 1999, Pesqueira said.
124. Less threatening contents named by Mr Milburn included sucrose, cocoa, butter, liquorice root and citric acid.
125. It was named enkephalin and its discovery was a major advance in the search for new analgesics.
126. This sumptuous bauble, appropriately named the Tor Abbey Jewel, was doubtless made for a wealthy patron.
127. Jaubert named a price and interest rate, assuming that the man would amortize the cost with a ten-year note.
128. Nigel Jones, who won Cheltenham for the Liberal Democrats has been named front bench spokesman on housing and local government.
129. She named him winebibber.
130. A trust that named Helen LaChance as trustee and Sam as beneficiary.
131. Each individually named political actor mentioned in an item was coded in the order in which he or she appeared.
132. Aptly named Tumbler is an ideal tomato for a large basket or even a patio tub or window box.
133. He has a phone pal from New York, a barber named Mario.Sentence dictionary
134. She went to San Diego for an internship, where she met an ambulance driver named Jerry Tonelli.
135. She would bear him a son named Epaphus, and live for ever after happy and honored.
136. First the doctor told me the good news: I was going to have a disease named after me. Steve Martin
137. Another is the ability to assign named paragraph styles to text.
138. Cerritos and defender John Doyle were both named to the Western Conference all-star team as reserves.
139. He reaches the ball a step ahead of an agile sprite named Molly, whose ponytail flows behind her baseball cap.
140. The vocative case indicates that the person or thing being named is being addressed directly, eg Yes, sir.
141. And this museum, previously named the Museum of Non-Objective Art, was championing abstract art as early as the 1930s.
142. We backed a horse named Travelling Light that finished first at 10-1.
143. Brown hired longtime aide Eleanor Johns as executive assistant to the mayor, and named campaign scheduler Whitney Schwartz as appointments secretary.
144. That issue was referred by the sale and purchase agreement to a named firm of chartered accountants to determine as experts.
145. Juveniles 15 and older committing rape or forcible assault are named prominently in offenses automatically transferred to adult court.
146. It seems, Freddie as he's been named, stowed away with a consignment of bananas from the Windward Islands.
147. Mulroney's request was, however, granted by the crown and he promptly named the additional senators.
148. The owner of a sterile racehorse named Cigar said he would apply for permission to replicate the beast.
149. The hero, a knight named Peter Loschy, went to do battle with the dragon.
150. Clinton named a new assistant attorney general for civil rights, Deval Patrick, who persuaded the administration to switch sides.
More similar words: unnamed, namedrop, name-dropping, name, names, byname, enamel, rename, namely, by name, big-name, name tag, surname, pen name, enameled, namesake, ornament, nameless, good name, full name, nickname, last name, name after, tournament, false name, famed, tamed, vietnamese, maiden name, middle name.