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Answer for the clue "The British Government ", 9 letters:
whitehall

Alternative clues for the word whitehall

Word definitions for whitehall in dictionaries

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 1044 Housing Units (2000): 507 Land area (2000): 0.683550 sq. miles (1.770386 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.683550 sq. miles (1.770386 sq. km) FIPS code: 79900 Located within: Montana ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Whitehall or White Hall is a house in Clarksville, Tennessee , that was built circa 1839. It housed a girls' school in the late 1840s. Now a private residence, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on January 31, 1978. The listing was ...

Usage examples of whitehall.

Whitehall, Adams knew, was that to the British there was as yet no proper American government and so it would be pointless to undertake serious transactions until such existed.

When such capers were cut at Whitehall, we may imagine what the revelry was in the Bankside taverns.

Whitehall Palace, and Cecil and Elizabeth were anxious that the traditions of Tudor rule should be seen as continuous.

WHITEHALL PALACE was a formidable structure with its thousand or so rooms, but the massive gardens, orchards, tennis courts, and tiltyard built during the reign of the late king were equally resplendent amid the color of the budding spring blossoms.

CHAPTER SIX FILLED with excitement and happiness at being escorted to Whitehall Palace by Blake, Katherine sat opposite him in the carriage with Amelia beside her, whose ladies were following on in another carriage.

Whitehall or Somerset House, or when she had been walking in the Palace gardens with Amelia and her ladies.

Bristow, at Whitehall lane, London: Carr, Stoke Newington, of gastritis and heart disease: Cockburn, at the Moat house, Chepstow .

The starlings told the time of the year as accurately as the best chronometer at Whitehall.

NOTE--Several other ports have since been proclaimed, viz., Whitehall, Lewiston, and others.

Blott dashed in and listened to General Burnett fulminating from the Grange about blackguards in Whitehall, red tape, green belts and bluestockings, none of which he fully understood.

Harry Price was the next most senior living officer, so Sharpe had made him into a Major and given Simon Doggett a Captaincy, though he had warned both men that the promotions might not stand up to the scrutiny of the civil servants in Whitehall.

He affected buttonholes and pale suits, and he pretended on the flimsiest grounds to an intimate familiarity with the large backrooms of Whitehall.

Several of the non-Companions looked again at the men who had campaigned with Raj Whitehall, noting the scars and missing limbs and limps.

Because what I hadn't told Monk was that the carriageways and footpaths of Whitehall Palace were covered with coquina – it had crunched under my feet as I wove my way to the offices of the Exchequer.

It came up for discussion about half past three and I understand the Director of Finance had all the costings ready to hand, reading them out in a flat monotone that was barely audible above the roar of Whitehall traffic.