amelia

[ US /əˈmiɫjə/ ]
NOUN
  1. congenital absence of an arm or leg

How To Use amelia In A Sentence

  • Those tiny little felt guys that I made for Amelia just before she was born have been loved a little and have ended up filthy and terribly pilled.
  • Poor Amelia, it was a good deal for her to be called prettier than a very dusty boy in a fight. The Copy-Cat, & Other Stories
  • Amelia” has an expressive score interwoven with moments of seeming simplicity: hymn tunes, a capella ensembles, and brief instrumental solos rising from the pit, all divided into scenes with orchestral intermezzi. "Amelia" at the Seattle Opera
  • We are all sick with mucky colds again and Amelia is in the middle of the worst of it.
  • The procedure cost five hundred dollars, which Amelia left unpaid.
  • Certain it is that the maid's speech communicated a suspicion to the mind of Amelia which the behaviour of the serjeant did not tend to remove: what that is, the sagacious readers may likewise probably suggest to themselves; if not, they must wait our time for disclosing it. Amelia — Complete
  • Amelia took several photos northward kneeling beside the chart table.
  • Jeff Madrick discusses the work of Elizabeth Warren and Amelia Warren Tyagi on the plight of middle-class two-income families with children. what families spend a lot more on, the authors calculate, is a house in a safe neighborhood with a ... EconLog: September 2003 Archives
  • For the first and last time in her life, Amelia was too preoccupied to interact with her peers.
  • For the first time this week Amelia did not grizzle or throw a tantrum whilst sitting in the trolley and I managed to negotiate the parking lot with grace and ease (my two imaginary friends).
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