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Answer for the clue "Sarah of tennis ", 5 letters:
cooke

Alternative clues for the word cooke

Word definitions for cooke in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Cooke is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Alan Cooke , British actor Alexander Cooke (died 1614), English actor Alfred Tyrone Cooke , of the Indo-Pakistani wars Alistair Cooke KBE (1908–2004), journalist and broadcaster Amos Starr Cooke ...

Usage examples of cooke.

Browne, Billington, Cooke, Gardiner, and Warren lived beyond the spring of 1621.

But this town of Venice, with everybody being polite and having good manners, is as tough as Cooke City, Mon­.

He had put the gun back in the drawer in the cabinet where it belonged, but the next day he took it out and he had ridden up to the top of the high country above Red Lodge, with Chub, where they had built the road to Cooke City now over the pass and across the Bear Tooth plateau, and up there where the wind was thin and there was snow all summer on the hills they had stopped by the lake which was supposed to be eight hundred feet deep and was a deep green color, and Chub held the two horses and he climbed out on a rock and leaned over and saw his face in the still water, and saw himself holding the gun, and then he dropped it, holding it by the muzzle, and saw it go down making bubbles until it was just as big as a watch charm in that .

The rivalry between Cooke and Haynes was as bitter as many religious conflicts.

While few Americans have heard of it, Britons know it as the congenial, rural town lionized on BBC radio’s “Letter from America”, broadcast by Alistair Cooke, one of our few unarmed residents.

Cooke and Charles Wheatstone, installed a practical deflecting needle telegraph along a railway line in England in 1837.

Cooke had been editor of the Ohio State Journal, a paper Chase had been much involved with.

A lucite photo cube containing trimmed magazine pictures of Buddy Holly, Sam Cooke, Otis Redding, Janis Joplin, and John Lennon.

Five years of war, hauling an ambulance through burning rubble-strewn streets, trying to forget a Guardsman who never came back from Dunkirk, and twenty years of nursing a crippled and whining mother, a bedridden tyrant who used tears for weapons, had taken away the youth and the pinchable qualities of Miss Marjory Cooke.

For in their succorless emptyhandedness, they, in the heathenish sharked waters, and by the beaches of unrecorded, javelin islands, battled with virgin wonders and terrors that Cooke with all his marines and muskets would not willingly have dared.

It was Jay Cooke who had taken over the selling of war bonds, not to the bankers, who were out to bleed the Treasury, but to ordinary citizens.

When Jay Cooke gives him five thousand dollars to help him in his campaign and then Cooke receives, in turn, a higher commission for the war bonds he sells, is that corruption?