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midwestern

[ US /mɪdˈwɛstɝn/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of a region of the United States generally including Ohio; Indiana; Illinois; Iowa; Missouri; Kansas; Nebraska; and sometimes Michigan; Wisconsin; Minnesota
    midwestern accent
    a midwestern city

How To Use midwestern In A Sentence

  • 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
  • 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.
  • In it he described with realism and satire the dullness of life in a small Midwestern town.
  • Beef and dairy farmers in Midwestern states that produce most of the nation's ethanol are able to feed their cattle with less expensive grains leftover from distilling that fuel. Archive 2007-06-24
  • But there's more flowing in this Midwestern metropolis than just suds.
  • A dimension where everyone lives in climate controlled gated estates and they don't like lost midwestern lunatics.
  • The midwesterners who composed Canby's army were probably among the more racist members of the Union army, but in diaries and letters home they reflectively pondered the performance of their fellow soldiers as peace loomed.
  • This is no great film, but to treat it like some made-for-TV biopic of an unknown Midwestern gangster and his ditzy moll is itself a crime.
  • Seems the fake Brad was barhopping through the stunned Midwestern nightlife with a bevy of bodyguards, garbed in a black cowboy hat and goatee.
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