[
US
/ˈnuˌkæsəɫ/
]
NOUN
- a port city in northeastern England on the River Tyne; a center for coal exports (giving rise to the expression `carry coals to Newcastle' meaning to do something unnecessary)
How To Use Newcastle In A Sentence
- It also says something about the psyche of the Newcastle manager and the mindset which he demands of his players.
- Kate, 19, visited the colony in late summer before starting her languages course at Newcastle University.
- Newcastle Brown Ale is an outstanding performer in the British beer market.
- In a home match against Huddersfield Town, Newcastle were 3-2 down after conceding a questionable penalty to the visitors.
- She has a first in English from Newcastle University.
- We're relocating just south of Newcastle.
- When I moved back to the north-east in the early 90s I travelled up with our furniture in a removal van with two blokes from the west end of Newcastle. Sportsmen and their women: history's great divide
- Scottish & Newcastle's production is already near full-capacity in Britain, producing approximately 16 million hectolitres of beer each year.
- NEWCASTLE, Ont. - A three-year-old boy is in stable condition in hospital after falling under a trailer being towed by a family vehicle in Newcastle, Ont. Durham regional police say officers were called to a residence in the community east of CTV News RSS Feed
- He was a sociable man and a popular figure in Newcastle, fond of a gossip on the Quayside or at the Exchange on Sandhill.