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American Revolutionary leader who served in the Continental Congress and as minister to France (1746-1813)
Answer for the clue "American Revolutionary leader who served in the Continental Congress and as minister to France (1746-1813) ", 10 letters:
livingston
Alternative clues for the word livingston
Word definitions for livingston in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 3498 Housing Units (2000): 1746 Land area (2000): 5.143145 sq. miles (13.320685 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.038371 sq. miles (0.099380 sq. km) Total area (2000): 5.181516 sq. miles (13.420065 sq. km) FIPS code: 43140 Located within: ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Livingston is a surname with several different origins. The name itself originates in Scotland as a habitational name derived from Livingston in Lothian which was originally named in Middle English Levingston . This place name was originally named after ...
Usage examples of livingston.
On her bedside table sat moisturizers, costume jewelry, a wooden hair brush, Kleenex in a pink ruffled box, birthday cards rigorously kept up to date, framed family photos, stuffed animals (one Garfield cat, two teddy bears, one polar bear), books for visitorsThe Best of Life and Jonathan Livingston Seagullplus a dieffenbachia vine that eventually colonized the entire room.
Some of these county seats date back to the eighteenth century and are very fine -- like Clermont, the principal Livingston house.
Steel forever marked the line of demarcation between the races: Delano, Madera, Merced, Livingston, Hughson, Turlock, Modesto, Riverbank, Waterford, Escalon, Salida, Manteca, Tracy, Stockton, Lodi, Sacramento, Marysville and on up into the north country.
Beside him, facing the desk where John Hancock sat in the president's chair, were Roger Sherman, Robert Livingston, Jefferson, and Franklin, all dead now except Jefferson, who in the painting held the Declaration in his hands.
I can still see him in bright summer Hudson riparian light, on a lawn at river-side, somewhere north of Rhinecliff, a Livingston house behind us, all white columns and cinnamon stucco, and we spoke of the necessity, for some, of living on this side of the Atlantic, some distance from our newspapered democracy.
The issue is rounded out with three more stories, and several poems, including “Volus Nocturnus,” by James Livingston, which takes the vitally important, but rather dry, concept of biodiversity and, through clever imagery, turns it into a touching and beautiful piece of wordsmithery.
It was one of the neatest Christmas presents I had gotten since Sadie Jo Livingston kissed me at the fifth grade Christmas party at Priceville Elementary.