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Wiktionary
eller

n. (obsolete form of alder English)

Wikipedia
Eller

Eller may refer to

  • An urban borough of Düsseldorf, Germany. See: Düsseldorf-Eller
  • A community on the Moselle in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. See: Ediger-Eller
  • A river in Lower Saxony, Germany. See: Eller (Rhume), Weilroder Eller, and Geroder Eller
  • A business school at the University of Arizona. See: Eller College of Management.

Eller is also the surname of the following people:

  • Carl Eller (*1942), American football player
  • Cássia Eller (1962-2001), Brazilian musician
  • Curtis Eller (*1970), "America's angriest yodelling banjo player"
  • David Eller (*1945), American professor of Religious Studies
  • Elias Eller (1690-1750), founder of the Zionite sect in Germany
  • Ernest M. Eller (1903-1995), Rear Admiral in the United States Navy
  • Fabiano Eller (*1977), Brazilian footballer
  • Fran Eller (1873-1956), Slovenian poet
  • Hans Eller (1910-1943), German rower
  • Heino Eller (1887-1970), Estonian composer
  • Hod Eller (1891-1961), American baseball pitcher
  • John Jacob Eller (1883-1967), American track and field athlete
  • Karl Eller (*1928), American entrepreneur in Arizona
  • Lars Eller (*1989), Danish ice hockey player
  • Marlin Eller, American programmer
  • Thomas Eller (*1964), German artist and writer
  • Vernard Eller (1927-2007), American Christian author
  • Walton Eller (*1982), American trap shooter
Eller (Rhume)

Eller is a river of Lower Saxony, Germany.

Usage examples of "eller".

Blake was sullen and uncommunicative, still angry because Eller had been proved so right.

He was standing by the control table, staring first at Eller and then down at his own body.

You're almost blind, Eller, but I think you'll be able to see -- this!

Suddenly Eller realized something that made chill fear rush through him.

Like so many other people at this time of year, Eller was out of town, vacationing with his family in Florida.

Boulder police chief Thomas Koby called detective commander John Eller and told him his help was urgently needed.

Meyer completed the autopsy, Commander Eller and Chief Koby still had questions, mainly relating to the actual cause of death, the weapon used in the blunt-force trauma, and the meaning and significance of the vaginal abrasions.

According to Steve Thomas’s account, Hofstrom informed John Eller that the Ramseys wanted the remains back.

Hofstrom then told Eller that the police could not “ransom” the body in exchange for an interview.

Among the detectives John Eller assigned was Steve Thomas, who had been working undercover narcotics.

I was introduced to Chief Koby, Commander Eller, and a police legal adviser.

Koby then left to prepare for the press conference, leaving Eller in charge of the meeting.

No, they were interested, Eller countered, and they would set up an interview with me the next day with two of their detectives.

I made a point of telling Eller that if they hadn’t done so already, they should get in touch with Ron Walker in the FBI’s Denver Field Office.

Before I even got to Boulder, Sergeant Larry Mason had been removed by Eller as lead investigator for leaking inside information to the media.