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Midwest

[ US /ˌmɪdˈwɛst/ ]
NOUN
  1. the north central region of the United States (sometimes called the heartland or the breadbasket of America)

How To Use Midwest In A Sentence

  • IHSB: The way to describe the first pro season for the most oddly named man alive (Allen Lorenz Pollock = A.J. Pollock?) is solid but unspectacular, which is disappointing given that the organization expected him to rip through Mid-A South Bend given that Midwest League Competition wasn't foreign to Pollock, given that Notre Dame plays an exhibition game against the SilverHawks at the beginning of each season. AZ Snakepit
  • We're looking at some idea that it might be a colder than normal winter in the Northeast and Midwest.
  • A prepossessing performer with a beautiful baritone, Murray is tall, blond and Midwestern - looking.
  • Brown, a captivating and mysterious Midwesterner whose intimate slices of life are as heart-achingly beautiful as she is, will begrudgingly let listeners step into her secret hiding place filled with honest-to-goodness words and music about the human condition. Michael Bialas: Why Pieta Brown Digs the Music of Dylan, Dire Straits and her Dad
  • My late husband was from the Midwest St. Louis and always used the 'drouth' pronunciation. Chicagotribune.com - News
  • It was one of the largest superlocal co-op chains of grain silos in the Midwest and aggressively tried new ventures, from raising hogs to processing soybeans for food.
  • Their city, known as the `Athens of the Midwest," was civic-minded, proud, and increasingly prosperous. ISAAC CAMPION
  • Now, I'm supposed to be pithy in this column, full of cute and snide comments about my Midwestern family, how they don't get it, how they're getting old and crotchety.
  • The worst drought across the Midwest in 17 years is now threatening commercial shipping.
  • Many Chicanos today live in the Midwest and the East.
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