[
UK
/ˈɒksfəd/
]
[ US /ˈɑksfɝd/ ]
[ US /ˈɑksfɝd/ ]
NOUN
- a university town in northern Mississippi; home of William Faulkner
- a university in England
- a city in southern England to the northwest of London; site of Oxford University
How To Use Oxford In A Sentence
- Tina gained admittance to Oxford, says the book, after she attended a "crammer" school designed to help late-blooming students pass university entrance exams. Tina 'Turner
- At fourteen he was sent to the University of Glasgow, where he came under the influence of Francis Hutcheson, and in 1740 he went up to Oxford as Snell exhibitioner at Balliol College, remaining there till 1746. Introductory Note
- The answer could be to remove the tonsils or adenoids, according to a study of 60 children in Oxford.
- It seems Oxford students really can achieve great things when they put their minds to it.
- Back in Oxford, he sat on the City Council, and began his lifelong activity of prison visiting.
- In truth, though, Oxford did not produce the hockey they are no doubt capable of in the second period.
- It was precision expectoration that accurately landed a deposit of froth about two feet from my Oxford brogues.
- Oxford Limited intends to offer colleges the opportunity to sell the items directly through the JCRs at competitive prices.
- From this interesting height there are two views: one over the beautiful plains of Lancashire, another towards the brumous mountains of Oxfordshire. A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2 To the Close of the 19th Century
- • Liz Chatterjee is a DPhil candidate in international development at the University of Oxford Time to acknowledge the dirty truth behind community-led sanitation