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Tilden

[ US /ˈtɪɫdən/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States tennis player who dominated men's tennis in the 1920s (1893-1953)

How To Use Tilden In A Sentence

  • A passel of kids of varying ages, the cousins love playing baseball in the front yard, romping on the beach just two blocks away, or exploring what's left of the Fort Tilden gun emplacements that overlook the Atlantic Ocean.
  • Tilden postulated that improper diet led to stagnation of food in the colon, which then putrefied and formed toxins.
  • In the infamous Hayes-Tilden election, no one dreamed of taking the contest to the court as a neutral forum.
  • If all the disputed electoral votes went to Hayes, he would win; just one of them would elect Tilden.
  • Of their surviving sons, Tilden is a taciturn headcase while Bradley is a sadistic brute who chopped off one of his legs with a chainsaw.
  • In answer to Tilden's protest against this treatment, Tweed loudly informed him that he represented no one but himself, that he had neither influence nor standing in the city, that he was an intermeddler with things that did not concern him, and a general nuisance. My Memories of Eighty Years
  • Margaret Stephenson of Tilden finished in 16.82 seconds and Cressent Temple Daily Telegram Sports Feed
  • They walked around the house, past a courtyard with brick paving and a six-car garage and out across the acres of Tilden land. DOLL'S EYES
  • Dr. Tilden said that diseases were crises of toxemia.
  • Tilden is confident that the physics behind the robot that he spent 16 years designing will keep copycats at bay at least until next year.
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