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Answer for the clue "Mount once called Tacoma ", 7 letters:
rainier

Alternative clues for the word rainier

Word definitions for rainier in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. (en-comparativerainy)

Usage examples of rainier.

I waited for Rainier to join me, I watched the boy escort two young witches across the side street.

He bounced off the chair and came over to stand next to Rainier and me.

At a stoplight, through some trees and off in the distance, I caught a brief glimpse of Rainier -- a smudge of white on the blue horizon.

Looking further southward, I could judge almost precisely where Carole had to have stood to see that particular view of Rainier, towering over me just to the north.

I asked, thinking of Mount Rainier and just how vast the national park was.

I looked up again, we were pulling to a stop at a convenience store in a small town named Elbe, whose main claim to fame was the Mount Rainier Scenic Railroad Excursion, a one-and-a-half-hour, fourteen-mile round-trip train ride through the lower-lying foothills surrounding the mountain.

He has to be found very soon - or the official investigation will probably decide that a massive eruption of Mount Rainier is what caused all the destruction.

Rita and Ali, Liz and Dick, Rainier and Grace, Coward, Capote, Warhol.

He was definitely caught between a rock and a hard place---a rock about the size of Gibraltar and a hard place about like Mount Rainier, and no space to move at that.

You will climb the mountains of dream, taller than Rainier, taller than Chomolungma.

He rotated the shuttle one hundred eighty degrees to starboard, slowly, facing in turn the solitary volcanic peaks of Mount Baker, Mount Rainier, Mount St.

Mount Rainier, an extraordinarily beautiful volcanic peak some fifty miles from the city, blew up in 1963, but nobody in Seattle is aware of this yet because the weather has been pretty cloudy.

It is a choice town, and we made satisfactory use of the hour allowed us, in roaming it over, though the weather was rainier than necessary.

Murrow, the celebrated CBS newsman, and Kenneth Arnold, a civilian pilot who saw something peculiar near Mount Rainier in the state of Washington on 24 June 1947 and who in a way coined the phrase.

The night was already cooling down, with the sun gone behind the cone of Mount Rainier for more than half an hour.