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Amy Klobuchar, for one (last 3 letters + ...)
Answer for the clue "Amy Klobuchar, for one (last 3 letters + ...) ", 10 letters:
minnesotan
Alternative clues for the word minnesotan
Word definitions for minnesotan in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Minnesotan \Minnesotan\ prop. n. A resident of Minnesota.
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Minnesotan is also a term for a resident of Minnesota . The Minnesotan was an overnight passenger train run by the Chicago Great Western Railway , using the CGW's trackage between Grand Central Station in Chicago , Illinois, and Saint Paul Union Depot in ...
Usage examples of minnesotan.
A born-and-bred Minnesotan, he considered it rude to ask for more information than the caller was willing to give.
The only thing that kept them from marching to the city jail to demand the head of Leslie Olin Sewek was an inbred Minnesotan aversion to creating a spectacle and a windchill factor of sixty-two degrees below zero.
Her husband, Johnny, was a tall, easygoing presence of Scandinavian-derived Minnesotan stock who happened to work in the business of motion pictures.
She wanted a wonderful Minnesotan winter, when she could run outside and fling herself into the deep white snow.
Believing this to be part of the campaign against him, the choleric Minnesotan replied in the house with a remarkable rhetorical display which greatly entertained the members but did not increase their respect for him.
It was the sort of storm that would depress a Minnesotan and make an Eskimo cry.
Your proper Minnesotan never made public reference to bodily functions, no matter how vague.
Random acts of violence undermined the foundation of what Minnesotans believed about their society.
Others were simple men of the land, Minnesotans or Californians walking to the legislature under their own steam.
All of us Minnesotans are born with either skates or skis on our feet.
In her brief stay in the northern Midwest, she had found most Minnesotans to be efficient and kind.
Afterward, the head of the Department of Ancient History explained the president to be more of a Minnesotan than a classical scholar and since Lake Itasca was the point of origin of the mighty Mississippi, the slip of the tongue was a natural one.