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Bloomington

[ US /ˈbɫumɪŋtən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a university town in south central Indiana

How To Use Bloomington In A Sentence

  • Bloomington is a small town, and any whiff of scandal would torpedo the project.
  • Over the past two years 3,665 well-paid factory jobs have left Bloomington.
  • The purpose of the contest is to recognize and encourage undergraduate scholarship in the Austrian tradition and the broadly catallactic approach to social science which it represents, an approach common also to the Scottish Enlightenmentof Smith and Hume, the French Liberal School of Say and Bastiat, the Virginia School of Buchanan and Tullock, the UCLA price theory of Alchian and Demsetz, and the Bloomington School of Vincent and Elinor Ostrom, among others. The Volokh Conspiracy » Carl Menger Essay Prize for Undergrads:
  • If Mr. Lincoln was six feet four inches high usually, _at Bloomington he was seven feet_, and inspired at that. The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln A Narrative And Descriptive Biography With Pen-Pictures And Personal Recollections By Those Who Knew Him
  • He was an explosive scorer in Bloomington and the term instant offense comes to mind, although I'd like to see him work on his ballhandling skills for a possible move to the point. MVN
  • Bloomington is one of the archetypal college towns in the United States, from the gorgeous campus to the showy liberal politics.
  • The purity of birdsong is owed in large part to rapid, controlled changes in the shape of the birds 'upper vocal tracts, according to a new study of Northern Cardinals by scientists at Indiana University Bloomington, Purdue University and Australian National University. Metabolism Screwup Day
  • Hazel Jean MacKey, 85 CLEARWATER, FL - Hazel Jean MacKey, age 85, formerly of Bloomington, died Friday in Clearwater, Fla. TMNews.com
  • According to Bloomington, Ind., police, Wilkerson struck his 20-year-old girlfriend in the face.
  • Toth, the Indiana anthropologist, is the founder and co-director of the Stone Age Institute at Bloomington, where he demonstrates how he can skillfully craft the hammers, sharp knives and spear points that evolution enabled the forebears of Homo Sapiens to make long before the dawn of true humanity. Archive 2007-02-01
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