Wabash

[ US /ˈwɔbæʃ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a tributary of the Ohio River that rises in western Ohio and flows southwestward across Indiana
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How To Use Wabash In A Sentence

  • In 1880, arc lights were mounted on huge towers in Wabash, Indiana, illuminating the entire city.
  • More than once Governor Harrison had asked for authority to raise an army with which to "scour" the Wabash territory. The Old Northwest : A chronicle of the Ohio Valley and beyond
  • grows even more touching with the response of the citizens of Wabash to his disability.
  • Lafayette, Ind. -- Wabash National Corporation (NYSE: WNC) reported year-overyear operating improvements across several key financial and operating metrics. Headlines - Inside INdiana Business with Gerry Dick
  • I feel like if I once turned loose people would begin to call Senator Beveridge the Grand Young Sphinx of the Wabash.
  • Dreiser had left the sycamores, the new-mown hay, and the moonlight on the Wabash for the big city, and one evening at a party at his apartment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan he struck up a conversation with his friend and fellow Hoosier Franklin Booth, a well-known illustrator. Interstate 69
  • Hanging in the hallway at Whites High School in Wabash, Ind., and the basketball team pictures from the past 40 years.
  • Perhaps it will help put things in perspective to be reminded that Vincent van Gogh was made redundant from an art gallery, Ezra Pound was outplaced from Wabash College in Indiana (sure, Wabash isn't Harvard, but still ...), why last year Pierce Brosnan was discharged of his duties as 007, and he was my favorite Bond ever. Annabelle Gurwitch: Post-Firing Advice for Larry Summers
  • All the car was singing a score of songs at once, and Bert, his head pillowed on Mary's breast with her arms around him, started "On the Banks of the Wabash. CHAPTER V
  • In testimony whereof, the said Lewis Cass, James B. Ray, and John Tipton, commissioners as aforesaid, and the chiefs and warriors of the said Potawatamie tribe have hereunto set their hands, at the Wabash, on the sixteenth day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and twenty-six, and of the independence of the United States the fifty-first. The Volokh Conspiracy » Error in Many Versions of the United States Constitution
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