Similar words: exfoliate, ford, word, cord, sordid, nordic, horde, order. Meaning: ['ɑksfə(r)d /'ɒk-] n. 1. a city in southern England northwest of London; site of Oxford University 2. a university town in northern Mississippi; home of William Faulkner 3. a university in England 4. a low shoe laced over the instep.
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61. She got a first in English at Oxford.
62. He coxed the Oxford boat.
63. One and two halves to Oxford Circus please.
64. Oxford and Cambridge are both collegiate universities.
65. Oxford attracts large numbers of visitors and sightseers.
66. We caught the 12.15 from Oxford.
67. He's the warden of Wadham College, Oxford.
68. Is this the bus for Oxford?
69. He was elected MP for Oxford East.
70. He came to Oxford and studied law.
71. Hallo[sentencedict.com], is that Oxford 56767?
72. Sarah came down from Oxford in 1966.
73. His son's up at Oxford .
74. Reply to Publicity Department, FREEPOST, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
75. He was educated at Balliol College, Oxford.
76. He's the son of an Oxford professor.
77. The Oxford and Cambridge colleges have numerous endowments. Sentencedict.com
78. The movement spread to Oxford.
79. The train arrived at Oxford Station twenty minutes late.
80. The play had a try-out in Oxford before it moved to London.
81. Oxford to London is about an hour's run by train.
82. He became a familiar sight on the streets of Oxford.
83. Living half the time in Oxford and half in Paris makes me feel quite schizophrenic.
84. She was reading for a degree of classical literature in Oxford when the war broke out.
85. Due to a security alert, this train will not be stopping at Oxford Circus.
86. The new finance minister was educated at Oxford and is as traditional as they come.
87. To her disappointment, they didn't go through Oxford but skirted round it.
88. A friend drove her to Oxford, where she picked up a rental car.
89. Scientists from Oxford shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1945.
90. Ben actually chose to go to a redbrick university because he didn't like the elitism of Oxford and Cambridge.