[
US
/ˈkeɪmbɹɪdʒ/
]
NOUN
- a university in England
- a city in eastern England on the River Cam; site of Cambridge University
- a city in Massachusetts just to the north of Boston; site of Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
How To Use Cambridge In A Sentence
- Cousin Molle goes to Cambridge and the niece is the only visitor. Letters from Dorothy Osborne to Sir William Temple (1652-54)
- Tiktaalik would have breathed like a lungfish, says Clack, senior assistant curator at Cambridge's University Museum of Zoology.
- Some hope, he thought; he'll be cuddled up in that motel on the Cambridge Road with you-know-who like he is every Saturday night. A WORM OF DOUBT
- According to a report by Cambridge Econometrics, an independent think tank, house prices in some parts of the UK have reached levels which are unsustainable in the long term.
- In 1805, an extremely handsome young man, he went up to Cambridge, where he attended intermittently to his studies between extravagant debauches there and in London.
- A Shandean fate overtook his body, which was taken by grave-robbers, recognized at an anatomy lecture in Cambridge, and secretly returned to its grave.
- And classical reminiscences have, even with him, a dull musty tinge which recalls the antiquarian in his Cambridge college-rooms rather than the visitor to Florence and Rome. Proserpine and Midas
- If you have to be snowbound, Cambridge, and especially the beautiful Charles Hotel, is a great place to be.
- I can't decide whether to accept the Cambridge or the London job, but in either event I'll have to move house.
- I have known and admired him since the early 1970's when we were postdocs together at Cambridge University.