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Answer for the clue "Name in a Beatles song title ", 7 letters:
eleanor

Alternative clues for the word eleanor

Word definitions for eleanor in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
also Elinor , from Provençal Ailenor , a variant of Leonore , introduced in England by Eleanor of Aquitaine (1122-1204), wife of Henry II. The Old French form of the name was Elienor .

Usage examples of eleanor.

He studied the best historical specimens of our species he could find, including Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, Albert Einstein, Jane Addams, Eleanor Roosevelt, Albert Schweitzer, and he interviewed the most outstanding living people available to him at the time.

He had lived at the splendid courts of Eleanor of Aquitaine and the Duc de Berry.

Uncovered drywall had been exposed where the piece of trim had covered it up, and Eleanor could see dents in it where Harmon had inserted the crowbar.

Doctor and his daughter to come to Patterne from Upton for a month, and make acquaintance with his aunts, the ladies Eleanor and Isabel Patterne, so that it might not be so strange to Clara to have them as her housemates after her marriage.

Eleanor, and the dark moods which now and then held her in sullen solitude.

Neither would she accept the invitations of the Spences, though Eleanor was with her frequently, and became her nearest friend.

Also to early readers Eleanor Cook, Ramsay Cook, Xandra Bingley, Jess A.

What was the result of the analysis On those ampoules Eleanor gave you?

At one end the forensic team had set out their equipment, a couple of Philips laptop terminals and various boxy 'ware modules which Eleanor guessed were analysers of some kind, although one looked remarkably like a microwave oven.

He now erased the passage, and wrote in its stead, "even with Eleanor Duplay I have some reserve, and I feel that I cannot throw it off with safety!

Mary Catherine, laughing hysterically, wrapped Eleanor up in her arms and held her tight.

Not the obvious ones like Eleanor Richmond and Mary Catherine - they were just pawns too - but the men in suits who hovered around the edges, just out of reach of the arc light's rainbow-tinged border.

Toward the end of the evening, Eleanor could tell that this was beginning to make Mary Catherine slightly uneasy.

Sociologists James Bossard and Eleanor Boll, after examining one hundred published autobiographies, found seventy-three in which the writers described procedures which were "unequivocally classifiable as family rituals.

The case had turned out to be far more complex and involved than anyone had realized at the start, and the bonuses and favours he and Eleanor were given by its extremely grateful owner, Julia Evans, were enough to retire onenough for their grandchildren to retire on, come to that.