Get Free Checker

Sinclair

[ US /ˈsɪnkɫɛɹ, sɪnˈkɫɛɹ/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States writer whose novels argued for social reform (1878-1968)
  2. English electrical engineer who founded a company that introduced many innovative products (born in 1940)

How To Use Sinclair In A Sentence

  • McKinnon looked consideringly at Ulbricht, then addressed himself to Dr Sinclair. SAN ANDREAS
  • Most lately, they had discovered evidence that Sinclair had been in Buckie on the night. THE SCAR
  • Ms Lisa Sinclair of Counsel is instructed by Davis & Co Solicitors
  • Like Sinclair, Tri-County is teaching more advanced skills to students who do arrive on campus better prepared.
  • He feared that by endorsing Sinclair he would alienate the banking and industrial elite, which he was attempting to win to the side of his New Deal policies.
  • Sulkily, the publicist moves to the back of the bar but Sinclair is still scowling.
  • The fire had come only five years after Upton Sinclair published his book The Jungle, which detailed the plight of the workers at a meat packer's plant.
  • When he turned back to Sinclair, his face was impassive, the Eton sang-froid unassailable. THE SCAR
  • Sinclair's first major involvement in intelligence came as director of naval intelligence from 1919 to 1921.
  • Sinclair received a telegram from a man named George Brasfield, who had lost his job or objecting to the distribution of anti-Sinclair literature. Greg Mitchell: Dispatches from Incredible 1934 Campaign: Upton Sinclair Fights Back Against Hollywood Scare Tactics
View all