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Cox
2[ koks ]
noun
- James Middleton, 1870–1957, U.S. journalist and politician.
Cox
1/ kɒks /
noun
- CoxDavid17831859MEnglishARTS AND CRAFTS: painter David. 1783–1859, English landscape painter
cox
2/ kɒks /
noun
- a coxswain, esp of a racing eight or four
verb
- to act as coxswain of (a boat)
Derived Forms
- ˈcoxless, adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of cox1
Example Sentences
On this, historian Heather Cox Richardson notes in her newsletter that, "While the Congressional Budget Office estimates this mass deportation will cost at least $88 billion a year, another cost that is rarely mentioned is that according to Bloomberg, undocumented immigrants currently pay about $100 billion a year in taxes. Losing that income, too, will likely have to be made up with cuts from elsewhere."
Adkins builds on a line of cases involving women like Kate Cox, a Texas woman who traveled out of state to seek an abortion after receiving a diagnosis of trisomy 18, a fetal condition that is usually fatal; and Amanda Zurawski, also from Texas, who suffered the preterm rupture of membranes, a condition that led to a severe infection that almost killed her.
Cox’s and Zurawski’s cases failed in the Texas Supreme Court, and there is reason to think Adkins and the other plaintiffs will meet a similar fate.
Carl Pope, the club’s longtime executive director, was present, as was Robert Cox, the club’s former president, who still served on the board.
Throughout his campaign, Cox told me, Zuckerman had downplayed his anti-immigration views, and he had succeeded in quieting his opponents.
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