[
US
/ˌmɪniˈæpəɫɪs/
]
NOUN
- largest city in Minnesota; located in southeastern Minnesota on the Mississippi river; noted for flour mills; one of the Twin Cities
How To Use Minneapolis In A Sentence
- Minneapolis-St. Paul is a winter carnival of skating, skiing, and shopping
- Jason gives a detailed account of the creation of the boiserie for an early eighteenth-century Parisian mansion and its recent restoration and installation in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
- He has gummy gaps in his grin, the result of a stint as a boxer in the 1980s (he moved to Minneapolis in '84, after losing a big match in Fort Dodge, Iowa).
- A reincorporation will allow MGEX to distribute exchange assets to members, including three buildings in downtown Minneapolis and the MGEX Clearinghouse, which matches and clears trades for all exchange activity, according to the exchange. Minneapolis Grain Exchange Gets For-Profit Conversion Approval
- The settlement stemmed from a complaint filed in July by Minneapolis barista Erik Forman who claimed he was fired for encouraging workers to join the Industrial Workers of the World union. IBTimes.com RSS Feed - Politics & Policy
- MINNEAPOLIS -- J.J. Putz exited Thursday's 11-0 victory over the Twins with what the reliever described as patella inflammation in his right knee. Chicago White Sox News
- Not surprisingly, last Friday's Minneapolis City Council meeting was dominated by the smoking ban ordinance, which burned up nearly two hours of debate.
- Government complaints alleging racial discrimination in rental policies have al ready been filed in Miami and Minneapolis.
- In Minneapolis, the city's multifaced plan to fund a stadium hit another obstacle Thursday, when officials conceded that the city's revenues remain $55 million short of the spending goals. Www.startribune.com
- It was not until Harry S Truman added civil rights to the 1948 party platform - under pressure from the mayor of Minneapolis, Hubert Humphrey - and desegrated the armed forces that the Democrats were identified with the civil rights movement. January 2004