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Merton

[ US /ˈmɝtən/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States religious and writer (1915-1968)
  2. United States sociologist (1910-2003)

How To Use Merton In A Sentence

  • By then he was a fellow of Merton College, Oxford, and studying Sanskrit in Heidelberg.
  • Only once, while Merton was doing some of his best acting, had there been a kind of wheezy tittering from certain members of the cast and the group about the cameras. Merton of the Movies
  • Et ego vero predictus Johannes Mayowe et heredes mei mesuagium predictum cum omnibus et singulis terris Toftis Croftis, pratis, pascuis et pasturis supradictis ac omnibus suis pertinenciis prefatis Roberto Throckmerton, Shakespeare's Family
  • Merton is an outer London Borough situated in the South West of Greater London and covers an area of 9380 acres, some of which are open parklands.
  • We're also expecting further improvements to the pelletizer project that we are installing in our Palmerton plant should result in even further improvements in furnace recovery because we'll have less iron carryover coming into our smelter which negatively affects the recovery. SeekingAlpha.com: Home Page
  • It is worth remembering that Stephen admits he was raised to be a monk; in many ways we aren't far from Thomas Merton's link between silence and the monastic and writerly lives.
  • Merton's witness to honest ecumenism and loving religious pluralism is even more needed now than it was in his day.
  • Turner became a fellow of Merton College, Oxford in 1607, holding the fellowship until 1648.
  • He then read classics and humanities at Oxford and became a fellow of Merton College in 1869.
  • The grammar schools in University towns had therefore originally no special importance, but many of the undergraduates who came up at thirteen or fourteen required some training such as William of Waynflete provided for his younger demies in connexion with the Grammar School which he attached to Magdalen, or such as Walter de Merton considered desirable when he ordained that there should be a Master of Grammar in his College to teach the poor boys, and that their seniors were to go to him in any difficulty without any false shame ( "absque rubore"). Life in the Medieval University
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