Kelt

[ UK /kˈɛlt/ ]
NOUN
  1. a member of a European people who once occupied Britain and Spain and Gaul prior to Roman times
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How To Use Kelt In A Sentence

  • There is an internal process that we go through, but it is kind of helter-skelter, in a good way. Restaurant Reviews
  • On the ground it was a world of shadows and sunny streaks, kept ever in interfluent motion by such a wind as John Skelton describes: Wilfrid Cumbermede
  • She was a beautiful ship, in what we call "high kelter;" she seemed a living body, conscious of her own superior power over her opponents, whose shot she despised, as they fell thick and fast about her, while she deliberately took up an admirable position for battle. Frank Mildmay Or, The Naval Officer
  • Such were the rimes of _Skelton_ (vsurping the name of a Poet Laureat) being in deede but a rude rayling rimer & all his doings ridiculous, he vsed both short distaunces and short measures pleasing onely the popular eare: in our courtly maker we banish them vtterly. The Arte of English Poesie
  • To say that they should have traded that security for the chance of having a larger majority I don't think even Skelton is claiming a veto-proof majority was achievable is short-sighted. Archive 2006-08-01
  • Also, you have to bear in mind that a pullout cannot just be a chaotic one, a helter-skelter.
  • In a bid to create a rival attraction to the London Eye and the Manchester Wheel, Ulverston Town Council decides to convert the monument into a helter-skelter.
  • Indeed, this name of Skelt appears so stagey and piratic, that I will adopt it boldly to design these qualities. Memories and Portraits
  • Many were kelts, fish that had spawned and then spent the winter in the river, but there were four fresh-run salmon glistening silver from the cold waters of the North Sea. Salmon are back in Scottish rivers in force, and as elusive as ever
  • Vehicles coming in the gates are checked for bombs, and white U.N. vehicles, mostly Toyota 4Runners, are parked helter-skelter around a dirt lot.
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