Similar words: frolicsome, tuck, stuck, lettuce, stucco, tuck in, tucked, tuck away. Meaning: n. a city in southeastern Arizona ringed by mountain ranges; long known as a winter and health resort but the population shift from industrial states to the Sunbelt resulted in rapid growth late in the 20th century.
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121, This migrant painting is hardly the first in the Tucson painter's political oeuvre.
122, Tucson has tried scheme after scheme to lure crowds to the city center.
123, Sharpton claims that Tom threw a tirade after a loss to Tucson High.
124, The author just got back to her adopted city of Tucson after a three-month book tour.
125, Video links were set up in Tucson and Phoenix for family therapy conference calls.
126, San Diego, of course, lost everything that Tucson gained, and jobs were simply moved from one pocket to another.
127, So now is the time to start talking -- and doing -- something about reducing poverty in Tucson.
128, In 1951 it was renamed the DeAnza, and sold again in 1957, when it became the Tucson Holiday Motel.
129, It could start by reducing the property tax rate, charging everyone less, including Tucson residents.
130, And recently Tucson Water has gone to great lengths to become a private utility.
131, Of course, Tucson Water is a public utility, and therefore is required to keep its records open to the public.
132, Instead, the friendly green thumbs at Tucson Botanical Gardens choose to throw open their gates for free.
133, It was this clientele which Hunter and his administrative staff took on in Tucson, in January 1994.
134, Often Tucson has been compared to Austin, Texas for its size, cost of living, and growth potential.
135, Romo says civil rights violations by the Border Patrol are rampant in Tucson.
136, Traditionally, Tucson Water officials have also been allowed to call the shots.
137, In the near future, Tucson voters will be asked to decide whether to privatize Tucson Water.
138, In 1990, Tucson had a poverty rate 40 percent higher than Phoenix and almost double the rate of Las Vegas.
139, The proposed charter ultimately makes the supervisors even more impotent than the current Tucson City Council.
140, The destruction of the Thornydale and Cortaro intersection just reveals the pervasive mentality in Tucson.
141, Unfortunately, Tucson Water is an agency with an entrenched and willful bureaucracy.
142, Hammond responded to a call to remove a female bobcat from Tucson Raceway Park.
143, Wages are too depressed in Tucson, this businessperson said, adding the initiative seems like a great idea.
144, But the legacy it leaves behind on annexations and incorporations will have significantly changed Tucson for decades to come.
144, Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
145, They predict the problem will only worsen as Tucson continues spiraling outward.
146, He notes battle lines are being drawn in the foothills of the Tortolita Mountains, just north of Tucson.
147, This way, Tucson can avoid falling prey to wildcat subdivisions on its fringes.
148, The day the City of Tucson awarded the first municipal cable television contract to Cox Cable.
149, Sam Behrend, executive director of Access Tucson, is angered by the survey.
150, A month ago at a one-day test heptathlon in Tucson, she threw almost 160 feet compared to 136-7 Friday.