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Calderon

[ US /ˈkɔɫdɝɑn, ˌkæɫdɝˈoʊn/ ]
NOUN
  1. Spanish poet and dramatist considered one of the great Spanish writers (1600-1681)

How To Use Calderon In A Sentence

  • S.-financed program helped opposition politician Rafael Angel Calderon Fournier win the presidency in 1990.
  • The NBA is nothing if not a giant trade rumour but this one involving the Raptors piques your attention: The rumbling is the Raps considering sending underachieving point guard Jose Calderon to Sacramento for the Kevin Martin who doesn't curl. Toronto Sun
  • Calderón defies rivalry: his intense devotion, his subtle intelligence, his sublime lyrism all combine to produce such marvels of allegorical poetry as Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
  • Immigration concerns will also likely surface in talks between Presidents Obama and Calderon.
  • We can only hope that Calderon can throw the cartels on the defensive, gain cooperation from a frightened public which is reluctant to trust police, and start controlling the drug kingpins -- whose organizations seem in the meantime to be decentralizing and squabbling over territory. Concern for MX Govt
  • _Si, si, si_!" is the simultaneous answer of assent, Calderon alone seeming to give it with reluctance; though he hesitates from timidity, not mercy. The Flag of Distress A Story of the South Sea
  • The artist Miguel Calderón, whom I befriended a year earlier, keeps a stash of canned beer near a speaker and scours the room to find me a date. Down and Delirious in Mexico City
  • Charles Calderon, D-Montebello, that would create a new regulatory agency with lower fees and exemptions for some schools.
  • All around them the bandits waited on horseback, except for Calderon who sat on the gypsy wagon's seat whistling a calming melody to his horses.
  • Calderone recalls being afraid the first time he had his eyebrows waxed seven years ago (though he points out that all the goombahs get their brows done now), and Cilione admits to similar fears.
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