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Harold

[ har-uhld ]

noun

  1. a male given name.


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Example Sentences

In the name of war, this century has seen an astonishing erosion of constraints on that very power, as Yale law professor Harold Hongju Koh details in his illuminating new book, "The National Security Constitution in the Twenty-First Century."

From Salon

Although he served as legal adviser to the Department of State in the Obama administration, in his warnings about the perils posed by the slide towards unilateral presidential powers, Harold Hongju Kou concedes that the president could have done more to curtail the Bush-era enhancement of the powers of the president.

From Salon

When Harold Wilson was Labour prime minister in the late 1960s, up to a third of people in England lived in a council house or flat.

From BBC

Sometimes we’ll go closer to church to Harold & Belle’s, which is New Orleans-style food.

Not long after midnight on election night, as the once unthinkable prospect of a Donald Trump victory was congealing into inevitability, former Democratic congressman Harold Ford made a rather fatuous plea on Fox News.

From Slate

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