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Hutchinson

American  
[huhch-in-suhn] / ˈhʌtʃ ɪn sən /

noun

  1. Anne Marbury 1591–1643, American religious liberal, born in England: banished from Massachusetts 1637.

  2. Thomas, 1711–80, American colonial administrator: royal governor of Massachusetts 1769–74; in exile from England after 1774.

  3. a city in central Kansas, on the Arkansas River.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It is also a first of its kind for Hutchinson Island, he explained, particularly because of its focus on design and luxury.

From MarketWatch • Apr. 1, 2026

A great many Black people worked at the Goodyear tire plant in South Los Angeles in the 1960s and ‘70s, and at other nearby industrial companies. “You had double exposure,” Hutchinson said.

From Los Angeles Times • Mar. 26, 2026

Hutchinson is also affiliated with Oregon State's College of Engineering.

From Science Daily • Mar. 3, 2026

Hutchinson agreed to sell most of Panama Ports and some 43 other ports around the world to the U.S. company BlackRock in March 2025.

From The Wall Street Journal • Feb. 1, 2026

In the country’s earliest years, the North End was home to the city’s colonial governor, Thomas Hutchinson, and to a well-known silversmith named Paul Revere, destined to become famous for a different reason.

From "1919 The Year That Changed America" by Martin W. Sandler