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Answer for the clue "Henry Ford's home ", 8 letters:
dearborn

Alternative clues for the word dearborn

Word definitions for dearborn in dictionaries

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 46109 Housing Units (2000): 17791 Land area (2000): 305.212281 sq. miles (790.496144 sq. km) Water area (2000): 1.837766 sq. miles (4.759793 sq. km) Total area (2000): 307.050047 sq. miles (795.255937 sq. km) Located within: Indiana (IN), ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (alternative form of dearborn English) n. A city in Michigan, USA

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dearborn \Dear"born\, n. A four-wheeled carriage, with curtained sides.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Dearborn may refer to:

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"light four-wheeled wagon," 1821, American English, supposedly from the name of the inventor, by tradition said to be Gen. Henry Dearborn (1751-1829).

Usage examples of dearborn.

Wexford was with the Dearborns and Howard at Vv home playing bridge a burglary took place in Kenbourne Vale.

Little by little, the restaurants on the block would suffer, too, their awnings getting ripped, the big yellow lightbulbs on the Laikon marquee burning out, the Greek bakery on the corner being taken over by South Yemenis from Dearborn.

It starts at the base of the old Grand Circle among weathered brown skyscrapers and slashes straight as a knife westward through where the city becomes horizontal, refusing to crimp until it becomes US-12 just east of Dearborn.

To Mayor Hartwell Thorin, ChanĀ­cellor Kimba Rimer, and High Sheriff Herkimer Avery, it sent greetings and recommended to their notice the three young men who delivered this document, Masters Dearborn, Stockworth, and Heath.

Now the black dream-mobile, which had running boards and a spare-tire well on the trunk, gathered speed as it cruised southward on Jefferson Street, which would not be Jefferson now but a street in Chicago, South Dearborn or South Clark.

I had a thirty-five-hundred-dollar-a-year job in Dearborn editing a furniture trade magazine, and I was drafted into the Signal Corps and sent to write training films.