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Answer for the clue "Singer Sheena ", 6 letters:
easton

Alternative clues for the word easton

Word definitions for easton in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Easton is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Adam Easton , English cardinal Amos Easton (1905–1968), better known as Bumble Bee Slim , American blues musician Bruck Easton , Canadian lawyer Clint Easton , English professional footballer ...

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 362 Housing Units (2000): 138 Land area (2000): 0.143454 sq. miles (0.371544 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.143454 sq. miles (0.371544 sq. km) FIPS code: 19600 Located within: Kansas ...

Usage examples of easton.

The Eastern Shore baseball league, composed of six natural rivals, including Easton, Crisfield, Chestertown and Patamoke, flourished and became notorious for having produced Home Run Baker, who would hit in one year the unheard-of total of twelve round-trippers.

Easton and I were to take with us seventy-eight pounds of pemmican, twelve pounds of pea meal, seven pounds of pork, some beef extract, eight pounds of flour, one cup of corn meal, a small quantity of desiccated vegetables, one pound of coffee, two pounds of tea, some salt and crystallose.

On one occasion, a congressional commission met with a number of chiefs at a German Reformed Church in Easton, Pennsylvania, to solicit their neutrality.

The weather was bitterly cold for men so thinly clad as Easton and I were, and the snow was so deep that we could not exercise by running, for we had no snowshoes, and while we wallowed through the deep snow the dogs would have left us behind, so we could do nothing but sit on the komatik (sledge) and shiver.

It is, in fact, to his faithfulness and control over the others, particularly Kumuk, that Easton and I owe our lives, as will appear later.

Finally the Eskimos stopped in a gully by a little patch of spruce brush four or five feet high, and while Iksialook foraged for handfuls of brush that was dry enough to burn, Potokomik and Kumuk cut snow blocks, which they built into a circular wall about three feet high, as a wind-break in which to sleep, and Easton and I broke some green brush to throw upon the snow in this circular wind-break for a bed.

He stayed north of Philadelphia and crossed the Delaware River from Easton to Phillipsburg, still on 22.

He was certainly “the oldest inhabitant,” and after vain efforts to chew the leathery meat, we turned in disgust to bread and coffee, and Easton, at least, lost faith forever in my judgment of toothsome game, and formed a particular prejudice against porcupines which he never overcame.

Our teeth would make no impression upon it, and Easton remarked that “the rubber trust ought to hunt porcupines, for they are a lot tougher than rubber and just as pliable.