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New England

NOUN
  1. a region of northeastern United States comprising Maine and New Hampshire and Vermont and Massachusetts and Rhode Island and Connecticut

How To Use New England In A Sentence

  • Hayes, now a professor of film in New England, blossomed under the master's tutelage, producing crisp, witty dialogue, and for a while the two were close.
  • We're familiar with the geography of New England.
  • ROBERTS: Well, from New England all the way down south, it's just one of those foggy, kind of drizzly days. CNN Transcript May 6, 2009
  • a scarlet "whittle" over all this motley finery; with a "outwork quoyf or ciffer" (New England French for coiffure) with "long wings" at the side, and a silk or tiffany hood on her drooping head, -- Priscilla in this attire were pretty indeed. Sabbath in Puritan New England
  • recent study published in the New England Journal of Medicine has raised a number of questions about the long term patency of endoscopically harvested saphenous veins that are collected and used for coronary artery bypass grafts. Medgadget
  • Now, that's acceptable for a six year old growing up in New England, but we can handle a more accurate version of history.
  • It's really a great opportunity for people to get out into the woods, said David Lee, assistant director of program operations at Northeast Passage, which runs disability-related sports and recreation programs and services throughout New England. N.H. wilderness trails offer unparalleled disabled access
  • That means they can afford a couple bobbles and they probably will have them with non-division games against New England, Carolina and Miami.
  • The positive virtues are those of many a New England area: clear air, swimmable sea, home-grown tomatoes.
  • A hundred years before Bushnell gave his speech, New England gifts were embroidering frolicking lambs and winsome shepherdesses on needlework pictures and samplers.
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