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Mortimer

[ US /ˈmɔɹtɪmɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. English nobleman who deposed Edward II and was executed by Edward III (1287-1330)

How To Use Mortimer In A Sentence

  • In the bower with his Welsh wife, Mortimer fumes impotently: ‘This is the deadly spite that angers me - / My wife can speak no English, and I no Welsh.’
  • The man that helped to trigger all the excitement by unearthing the Viking relic, Dalton metal detector enthusiast David Mortimer-Kelly, is also hard at work scanning for more artefacts.
  • The Mortimer Hotel offers easy access to central London.
  • One of the most famous examples was that of the union between William Bohun and Elizabeth, widow of Edmund Mortimer and coheir to the Badlesmere inheritance in 1335.
  • In Who's Who, Mortimer lists his hobbies as gardening and listening to opera.
  • Mrs. Mortimer noted her sparkling glances which took in everything, and went out of her way to show Saxon around, doing it under the guise of gleeful boastings, stating the costs of the different materials, explaining how she had done things with her own hands, such as staining the doors, weathering the bookcases, and putting together the big Mission Morris chair. CHAPTER III
  • They were shown over the cattery, the piggery, the milkers, and the kennelry, as Mrs. Mortimer called her live stock departments. CHAPTER III
  • No signs of violence were to be discovered upon Sir Charles's person, and though the doctor's evidence pointed to an almost incredible facial distortion -- so great that Dr. Mortimer refused at first to believe that it was indeed his friend and patient who lay before him -- it was explained that that is a symptom which is not unusual in cases of dyspnoea {2} and death from cardiac exhaustion. The Seriously Deranged Writer and the Model Cars
  • When, two years ago, Mortimer gave us Rumpole Rests His Case, with its last story featuring our hero being carted off horizontal with a dodgy ticker, there was much lamenting.
  • Sir Henry Mortimer Durand had decreed so in 1893 with an imperious gesture, and his arbitrary demarcation is still known as the Durand Line. The Perils of Partition
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