Lincoln

[ US /ˈɫɪŋkən/ ]
NOUN
  1. capital of the state of Nebraska; located in southeastern Nebraska; site of the University of Nebraska
  2. long-wooled mutton sheep originally from Lincolnshire
  3. 16th President of the United States; saved the Union during the American Civil War and emancipated the slaves; was assassinated by Booth (1809-1865)
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How To Use Lincoln In A Sentence

  • General Alfred Terry traveled due west from Fort Abraham Lincoln in Dakota Territory with a force that included Custer and his Seventh Cavalry troopers.
  • The evidence she’d gathered at the beach had already arrived, delivered by a young tech who’d sheepishly entered the den of the legendary Lincoln Rhyme without a word and scurried about to deposit the bags and stacks of pictures as the criminalist gruffly directed. The Stone Monkey
  • Settling in Carmel, Calif., in 1930, she and Mr. Newell joined a bohemian community that included the photographer Edward Weston and the journalist Lincoln Steffens.
  • You have to do your own growing no matter how tall your grandfather was. Abraham Lincoln 
  • In the Whispering Gallery at the presidential library and museum, Aidan was blown away by political cartoons of the day that criticized Lincoln for his stance on slavery.
  • The buzzard, although not a native of the Eastern Counties, is apt to appear in both Lincolnshire and Norfolk from time to time.
  • We were in the backyard, in the big bare place Lincoln had worn in the grass.
  • Thomas Lincoln, on the other hand was more like a "fireplug," Price said. Opening Arguments
  • A strain of bird flu has been detected on a turkey farm in Lincolnshire. Times, Sunday Times
  • They then entered Isabella's chamber, where they found her together with Mortimer and the Bishop of Lincoln.
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