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Lancaster

[ US /ˈɫænˌkæstɝ, ˈɫæŋkəstɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the English royal house that reigned from 1399 to 1461; its emblem was a red rose
  2. a city in northwestern England

How To Use Lancaster In A Sentence

  • On June 15 at the Royal Lancaster Hotel in London, his original pastels will be auctioned, with some proceeds going towards children's charities.
  • “If America was a person, — and it sat down, — Lancaster town would be plunged into a Darkness unbreathable.” Making Light: We Await Silent Tristero’s Empire Nuku Nuku
  • Coun Kevin Lancaster said the council should press the Environment Agency to carry out the work after 2006.
  • This is the inexorable logic of Lancaster's philosophy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The countess of Lincoln, twice widowed, once by Thomas, earl of Lancaster, and once by Ebulo Lestraunge, and therefore with two dowers, as well as being the Lacy heiress in her own right, was a very worthwhile prospect for anyone on the rise.
  • Arrangements were well advanced for linking up this newly operated length with the Lancaster bypass.
  • Contemporary dance artists Forecast will be performing their new show Ready at Lancaster University's Nuffield Theatre on Tuesday.
  • Things are beginning to stir in Lancaster's Ryelands Park this spring and local people are needed to help turn the breeze into a whirlwind.
  • In about eight miles of Lancaster, there are about 25,000 Amish living in seclusion.
  • Nearly 6,000 enthusiasts flocked to the Aviation Viewing Park to see the show and a fly-past by the RAF's Battle of Britain Memorial Flight, featuring a Lancaster bomber and Hurricane and Spitfire fighters.
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