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Answer for the clue "City whose major league baseball team was once named the Naps ", 9 letters:
cleveland

Alternative clues for the word cleveland

Word definitions for cleveland in dictionaries

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 96287 Housing Units (2000): 40317 Land area (2000): 464.629397 sq. miles (1203.384562 sq. km) Water area (2000): 3.966503 sq. miles (10.273196 sq. km) Total area (2000): 468.595900 sq. miles (1213.657758 sq. km) Located within: North ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
The Cleveland Motor Car Company of Cleveland, Ohio , was manufacturer of the Cleveland automobile. The company was founded in 1904 by E. J. Pennington .

Usage examples of cleveland.

Cleveland disc jockey named Alan Freed, who had studied classical trombone before taking to the airwaves, where he introduced his listeners to the music of Chuck Berry, Fats Domino and other such exotics.

Europe scientific tests have proven that the Andalusian contributed to the development of the Connemara, the Cleveland Bay, the Friesan, the Hackney, the Percheron, the Thoroughbred, and the Welsh.

He and his colleagues at the OSI had identified a Cleveland autoworker named John Demjanjuk as Ivan the Terrible.

Shortly before the Great War, Bedaux set himself up in Cleveland as a business efficiency expert and there he started to spread the gospel of what he called the B-Unit a means of relating time to movement in factory operations.

MAJOR-GENERAL HALLECK: I think it very important for General Rosecrans to hold his position at or about Chattanooga, because if held from that place to Cleveland, both inclusive, it keeps all Tennessee clear of the enemy, and also breaks one of his most important railroad lines.

October of 1894 Daniel McCone, the founder and owner of the Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron Company, then the largest single employer in Cleveland, Ohio, informed his factory workers through their foremen that they were to accept a 10 percent cut in pay.

Daniel McCone was a brilliant and brutal Scottish engineer and metallurgist, who founded the Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron Company, the largest single employer in Cleveland when I was born.

It happened in Cleveland, in front of the main gate of Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron, on Christmas morning in Eighteen-hundred and Ninety-four.

Where it happened was west of Cleveland, at the far edge of Cuyahoga County, under a big white tent, the hot dusk air tangy with the smells of fried dough, manure, and roasted corn.

Lawrence and Lake Ontario were places of rendezvous for the Fenian troops who were steadily arriving from the interior of New York State, while the Western and Southern contingents gathered at Detroit, Toledo, Cleveland, Erie and Buffalo.

When Victor Piles came around crying about the rollicking carriage and dappled nags straining for Tejas down the old Natchitoches road, Hodge agonized over which of his darlings to risk and flaunt in pursuit of the renegade hero of Cleveland and Ashtabula.

Fiorella, who had been on a terminal ward in Cleveland for two years and survived osteomyelitis, an infection of the bones.

She found out that Bill Randle, the new rock-and-roll king of Cleveland, used to be in the CIA.

We played the best semipro clubs in the Cleveland area, and I beat them all.

Rural African Americans working as sharecroppers in the South and whites from the hills of Tennessee and Kentucky were drawn to the factories of Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and elsewhere with the promise of big money.