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Vaux

[ US /ˈvɔks/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States landscape architect (born in England) who designed Central Park (1824-1895)

How To Use Vaux In A Sentence

  • John Devaux, who became a Recorder and head of chambers in 1989, has been appointed a circuit judge.
  • Early examples of the genre often depicted real or imagined debates between a heretic and a Catholic and originated primarily in monastic communities, from the pens of such prestigious abbots as Bernard of Clairvaux and Peter the Venerable. A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • Au reste, leur coutume est de tenir leurs chevaux sur le maigre (de ne point les laisser engraisser). The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • He talks about la bonne vaux, the valley of abundance, the sacred combe. Times, Sunday Times
  • The tondo of the collage is a photograph, but only apparently a photograph of a detail from Delvaux's Aurore.
  • So one would image that the latest new fangled marketing initiative at Vaux-owned Swallow Hotel in Gateshead gets his backing.
  • We drove on round Vauxhall Cross, a giant ring road which has been undergoing a radical facelift for what seems like forever.
  • Police recovered a collection of weapons including steel bars, hammers and clubs, as well as a Vauxhall car.
  • But De Vaux was influenced only by his general prejudices, which dictated to him the assured belief that a wily Italian priest, a false-hearted Scot, and an infidel physician, formed a set of ingredients from which all evil, and no good, was likely to be extracted. The Talisman
  • Four men in a stolen red Vauxhall Cavalier attacked the stand-alone cash machine by placing a metal chain around it and pulling it out onto the pavement.
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