[
US
/ˈkɫaɪd/
]
NOUN
- a river in western Scotland that flows from the southern uplands into the Firth of Clyde; navigable by oceangoing vessels as far as Glasgow
How To Use Clyde In A Sentence
- Clyde's request stemmed from either a headache or a sudden phobia, he wasn't sure which. DO NO HARM
- Ruddy-faced Frank, looking far younger than his 90 years, recalls how he worked with teams of Clydesdale horses, sometimes in pairs and threes for ploughing.
- Two tugs from Clyde coastguards tried unsuccessfully to pull the vessel clear and it was freed the next day on the early morning tide.
- Clyde must have mistaken violent outbursts to mean outbursts of violence rather than intense, brief tantrums. DO NO HARM
- It certainly has stimulated the immune systems," Clyde said as he continued to study the lymphokine chart. Invasion
- Unless Celtic are given special dispensation to register the midfielder for the New Year's Day game against Hearts at Tynecastle, Keane will not be eligible until the Scottish Cup tie away to Clyde the following weekend.
- The peninsula is sandwiched between two sea lochs, Loch Fyne to the west and Loch Long to the east - the latter penetrating inland from the Firth of Clyde.
- Pluto was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930
- It took very little coaxing to get Clyde to bring his dowsing rods to the next class.
- Unfortunately for Stanley, these are the footgear of baseball player Clyde Livingstone, who has donated them to a local orphanage.