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Answer for the clue "Noted televangelist ", 9 letters:
robertson

Alternative clues for the word robertson

Word definitions for robertson in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Robertson is a patronymic surname , originating in northern England and Scotland . It means "son of Robert". Notable people with the surname include: A. Willis Robertson (1887-1971), former U.S. Senator from Virginia, father of Pat Robertson Alec Robertson ...

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 16000 Housing Units (2000): 7874 Land area (2000): 854.564654 sq. miles (2213.312199 sq. km) Water area (2000): 11.106365 sq. miles (28.765353 sq. km) Total area (2000): 865.671019 sq. miles (2242.077552 sq. km) Located within: Texas ...

Usage examples of robertson.

The history of Shakespear's tragedies has thus been the history of a long line of famous actors, from Burbage and Betterton to Forbes Robertson.

Unlike Tom Jedd, who carried his severed arm and pretended to use it as a back scratcher out there at Tire World, Robertson was in denial of his death, and he chose not to sport his mortal wound, just as Penny Kallisto had initially manifested without evidence of strangulation, ac&amp.

The Bob Robertson who left his kitchen strewn with dirty dishes, banana peels, and crumbs was too sloppy to be a wise strategist.

The three white people recognized the faces immediately: Jackie Robinson from baseball, Jim Brown the great football running back, and Oscar Robertson, perhaps the best basketball player who ever lived.

Pat Robertson with his Pan-Cake makeup couldn't hold a candle to this guy.

Through an emotional fundraising drive on his TV station, Robertson raised several million dollars for the tax-free charitable trust.

He had wanted to use it to transport the ISEG from Muscat to Incirlik, but Dan Robertson had sent him a coded e-mail explaining that the USAF Spec Ops people wanted to change out the pilots for the new mission and the new crew had to practice flying the commercial airliner without the tail cone and with the rear hatch opened as it would be for parachute inserts.

There had been a suggestion, by no means the first that year--or that generation--that the corporate name be changed to World Robots, but Robertson would never allow that.

The New York Times, National Public Radio and 60 Minutes, the infotainment flagship of the CBS network, all announced that Robertson and his Coalition were finis, his political machine sunk.

Solomon's Mines, Trade Winds, John Bull, Cellars Wineshop, the Island Shop, the English China House, Kelly's, Lightbourns, M'Lords, Mademoiselle, The Nassau Shop, the Perfume Box, Robertson and Symonette, Sue Nan's, Vanity Fair.

It was quite a showplace and Harriman suspected that Robertson used juvenile hormone to control insect life without regard to environmental formulas.

He announced that he was now a true Robertson and no longer a bastard, the Scottish court, under obdurate pressure from MacPherson, having legitimized him the afternoon before in Edinburgh.

Robertson Davies, novelist, playwright, literary critic and essayist, was born in 1913 in Thamesville, Ontario.

Until now I had thought of Robertson as a lone gunman, a mental and moral freak scheming toward his bloody moment in history, like so many of those infamous scum in his exquisitely maintained files.

It was as necessary to separate Parkes and Robertson as it was to keep Elizabeth and Ruby apart.