[
US
/ˈməɹi, ˈmɝi/
]
NOUN
- a southeast Australian river; flows westward and then south into the Indian Ocean at Adelaide
- British classical scholar (born in Australia) who advocated the League of Nations and the United Nations (1866-1957)
- Scottish philologist and the lexicographer who shaped the Oxford English Dictionary (1837-1915)
How To Use Murray In A Sentence
- Murray begins his survey at 800 B.C., arguing that innovation before then had been more species-wide than individual and had tended largely to evanesce rather than become established, other than in China.
- choco-lemon's diary choco-lemon's Diaryland Diary nerves up until lunch this was a completely horrible day. it picked up when me, lindsay, and krist stopped at murray to buy a quatch. once we smoked i bowl i felt a million times better. and that scares me. Nerves
- Although the World Cup is all encompassing at the moment, when it comes to sport there is no more spine-tingling moment than when 65,000 fans at Murrayfield sing ‘Flower of Scotland’.
- A prepossessing performer with a beautiful baritone, Murray is tall, blond and Midwestern - looking.
- Living on an irrigation property on the banks of the Murray River, Ray's childhood was spent on the farm helping with flood irrigation, fencing, harvesting lucerne, shearing and crutching.
- The "Very Funny" cable network burned off the whopping nine-episode season of its sly charmer about Chicago sportswriter PJ (Jordana Spiro) and her pals on Sundays opposite such sky-high-profile cable competition as Keeping Up with the Kardashians and Mad Men — whose costar Joel Murray, aka rehabbed alky Freddy Rumsen, guested on Boys as the owner who sold the gang's hangout, Crowley's, to Brando (Reid Scott) in the season finale. Cheers & Jeers: My Boys to Men?
- More From The Times Britons to skive off work for Murray semi. Fed Express Fails to Deliver
- Andy Murray has a busy end to the season, with tournaments in Valencia, Paris and London – plus brother Jamie's wedding Andy Murray saving his best until last as competition intensifies
- The greatest lexicographer of the 19th and early 20th century, James A.H. Murray, began his Romanes Lecture in 1900 on The Evolution of English Lexicography — one of the key texts in English lexicography — with a little story: Analyzing Becky Sharp’s Trash
- ‘I was opposed to the early release because I couldn't believe somebody capable of doing that could change in only two years,’ said Mrs Murray.