Get Free Checker

Merrimac

[ US /ˈmɛɹɪmæk/ ]
NOUN
  1. an ironclad vessel built by the Confederate forces in the hope of breaking the blockade imposed by the North

How To Use Merrimac In A Sentence

  • Meanwhile, the others had razeed a frigate, the _Merrimac_, and upon an angular roof laid railroad-iron to make her shot-proof. The Lincoln Story Book
  • A city of northeast Massachusetts on the Merrimack River north - northeast of Lowell.
  • Jeff Hayward of the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley, told the Boston Globe: People are walking through the door who never have before…A lot of times they don't know what services there are or where to get them.'' Here's Life Inner City: Massachusetts Families Seeking Help in Record Numbers
  • We ran up a new flagstaff, and every man stood to the guns, and the Merrimac moved from Sewell's Point, her head turned to the Minnesota, away across, grounded on a sand bank in the North Channel. The Long Roll
  • By mid week, Merrimac had no pledges on the board, but lighting manager Dan Folding is revving up the forces.
  • Very likely the Abenakis paddled along the Merrimac River for a stretch of the expedition.
  • He said the bluefish off the mouth of the Merrimack in Newburyport were biting like snakes. FOLLOW THE SHARKS
  • He said the bluefish off the mouth of the Merrimack in Newburyport were biting like snakes. FOLLOW THE SHARKS
  • A hurricane watch, meaning hurricane conditions could arrive within 48 hours, were issued north of Sandy Hook up to the Merrimack River in New England, according to the National Hurricane Center.
  • This case involves the installation of a wet flue gas desulphurization system (also known as a "scrubber") at Merrimack Station, an electricity generating facility in Bow owned by the appellee, Public Service Company of New Hampshire (PSNH). All Stories
View all