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Drummond
[ druhm-uhnd ]
noun
- Henry, 1851–97, Scottish clergyman and writer.
- William, 1585–1649, Scottish poet.
- William Henry, 1854–1907, Canadian poet, born in Ireland.
Example Sentences
It’s about a half-mile walk from the closest parking area, located four miles southeast of the town of Drummond, to the shores of Porcupine Lake, where a few dispersed campsites dot the shoreline and are popular with anglers.
Drummond and Marc Gasol were too slow laterally to contain Phoenix’s guards, and the Lakers’ smaller lineups lacked the necessary discipline to protect the paint and the three-point line.
Drummond had 20 points and 11 rebounds Saturday, and that was without James and Davis, who overwhelmed playoff opponents last year with their physicality.
Drummond drew the inspiration for the race from the Big Dog Backyard Ultra Race in Tennessee, in which contestants run a roughly four-mile loop once every hour, then wash, rinse, and repeat until all but one person give up.
In time I got over Estella (what a tease—Bentley Drummond was welcome to her).
The opposite bank was manned by Germans, and in the darkness Deane-Drummond fell into a slit trench on top of a German soldier.
Deane-Drummond found a wall cupboard about four feet wide and 12 inches deep with a flush-fitting concealed door.
Instead, the company offered its counsel, David Drummond, to the panel.
Ree Drummond, aka The Pioneer Woman, knows how to make a hungry crowd happy.
Drummond was a useful half, and five of the pack had either first or second fifteen colours.
Drummond, either through natural genius or because he spent more time with him, was generally able to act as interpreter.
The next minute the defence had been pierced, and Drummond was lying on the ball a yard across the line.
The Drummond Light of Freedom burns brighter in the diminished distance.
"We are going to be great friends, Miss Drummond and I," she said.
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