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Answer for the clue "United States historian (born in 1908) ", 8 letters:
woodward

Alternative clues for the word woodward

Word definitions for woodward in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Woodward is a surname. Notable people with the name Woodward include:

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 126 Housing Units (2000): 69 Land area (2000): 0.897495 sq. miles (2.324502 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.897495 sq. miles (2.324502 sq. km) FIPS code: 86432 Located within: Pennsylvania ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (context archaic English) A warden of a wood.

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Woodward \Wood"ward`\, n. (Eng. Forest Law) An officer of the forest, whose duty it was to guard the woods.

Usage examples of woodward.

Except for his anachronistic wrist recorder, he was the archetype of the questing reporter: Clark Kent, Woodward and Bernstein, and, of course, Lincoln Steffens.

Woodward, 39, who had had some experience with Japanese diplomatic codes at the Shanghai station from 1938 to 1940.

Dawson and Woodward believed that the tools and bones in better condition, including the Piltdown man fossils, dated to the Early Pleistocene, while the others had originally been part of a Pliocene formation.

The fragments found later by Dawson and Woodward together were not soaked in potassium dichromate and hence had no chromium in them.

This doubtless explained why Tiberius had taken to filling his larder with royal game, earning himself a heavy and quite probably unpaid fine from the Swanimote Court at the rumoured bidding of chief woodward Longrigg, whose long ago courtship of Dorothea was sure to have a bearing on the case.

Beck of Kentucky, Randall and Woodward of Pennsylvania, Marshall of Illinois, Brooks, Wood, Potter, Slocum, and Cox, of New York, Kerr, Niblack, Voorhees, and Holman of Indiana, Eldridge of Wisconsin, Van Trump and Morgan of Ohio, unitedly presented a strong array of Parliamentary ability.

Steven, 264 Wood, Jack, 155 Woodward, Bob, 379-80 Woodward, Gilbert, 278 Woolsey, R.

Doubts persisted that the jaw and skull of Eoanthropus belonged to the same creature, but these doubts weakened when Woodward reported the discovery in 1915 of a second set of fossils about 2 miles from the original Piltdown site.

Woodward suggests that such a synthesis can be achieved through approaching the novel as a study of the Schopenhauerian struggle of wills.

Vail stepped back from Vulpes and turned to Woodward, who was leaning against a bench, smiling.

They sat down, Vail and Vulpes facing each other and Woodward at one end of the table, like the moderator on a talk show.

Vulpes with the staff and would not until he had analysed his meeting with Vulpes and Woodward and formed a beginning strategy for dealing with the situation.

On Woodward Avenue the auto magnates had built the beautiful Detroit Institute of Arts, where, that very minute while Desdemona rode to her job interview, a Mexican artist named Diego Rivera was working on his own new commission: a mural depicting the new mythology of the automobile industry.

I am aware that two palaeontologists, whose opinions are worthy of much deference, namely Bronn and Woodward, have concluded that the average duration of each formation is twice or thrice as long as the average duration of specific forms.

Many names in the catalogue of these early physicians have been associated, in later periods, with the practice of the profession,-- among them, Boylston, Clark, Danforth, Homan, Jeffrey, Kittredge, Oliver, Peaslee, Randall, Shattuck, Thacher, Wellington, Williams, Woodward.