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Quaid

Quaid is a Urdu word meaning "leader."

It may also refer to:

  • Quaid-e-Azam International Airport, Karachi, Pakistan
  • Quaid-i-Azam University, a university in Islamabad, Pakistan
  • Quaid-e-Millath, a college of the University of Madras
  • Quaid Road, a controversial private road near Cairns, Australia
  • Mazar-e-Quaid is the tomb of the founder of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

Quaid is the name of:

  • Randy Quaid, American actor
  • Quaid-e-Azam, official title of Mohammad Ali Jinnah in Pakistan, meaning "The Great Leader"
  • Douglas Quaid, the fictional main character in the films Total Recall (1990) and Total Recall (2012)
  • Dennis Quaid, American actor (Randy Quaid's brother)

Usage examples of "quaid".

Marshall and Quaid had gone off to check out the parking lot while he had been left to watch the front of the building.

Marshall, Quaid and a small cohort of NSA agents made their way down the charred ramp, stepping over the gnarled pieces of steel that now littered the slope.

Levine and Quaid all looked up at the same time as the entire third floor of the building flared like a fiery flashbulb, lighting up the night.

Sub-Level Two, the last tiling he heard was the echoing voice of Harold Quaid of the National Security Agency shouting fiercely at some poor unseen subordinate.

Harold Quaid of the National Security Agency and another agent, both dressed in SWAT gear.

Maybe even a scream from Quaid, whom he had last seen standing in the middle of the pool of water, firing at him.

He also saw the bodies of the NSA agents, Quaid and Martinez, lying motionless on the watery floor.

Swain thought, as he stood over the body of Harold Quaid, it made it sound like a new model motorcycle.

And if Quaid really was NSA, who knew what sort of voltage it was packing.

He discarded the assault rifle and bent down to examine the bodies of Quaid and Martinez.

The first of them a young technician came straight up to Quaid and they spoke quietly.

In his early twenties, Quaid had deep-set eyes with all the warmth of a reptile.

Longarm took an instant dislike to the horse that Quaid had selected for him.

Two or three times Quaid glanced back, but he kept his horse going until he reached, then disappeared into the rocks.

So Longarm worked his way up through the trees that flanked the trail Quaid had followed until he was almost to the jumble of broken rocks that formed a natural ambush.