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Tuchman

[ tuhk-muhn ]

noun

  1. Barbara (Wert·heim) [wurt, -hahym], 1912–1989, U.S. historian and writer.


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Example Sentences

McClintick and Tuchman’s home is less than a mile from an expansive urban wildlife crossing being built over the 101 Freeway in an effort to provide safe passage for cougars and other critters.

When it comes to public blowback from conservatives or liberals, the cost for brands is typically short-lived, according to Anna Tuchman, associate professor of marketing at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management.

Historian Barbara Tuchman, in "A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century," writes that Christianity provided "the matrix and law of medieval life, omnipresent, indeed compulsory."

From Salon

Tuchman, who previously held several senior positions across regions in Citi's markets franchise, intends to pursue opportunities outside the firm, according to the memo.

From Reuters

Stiles and Barbara Tuchman jump to mind as his peers for making every page fascinating.

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