Find the word definition

Gazetteer
Blytheville, AR -- U.S. city in Arkansas
Population (2000): 18272
Housing Units (2000): 8533
Land area (2000): 20.588248 sq. miles (53.323314 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.059494 sq. miles (0.154090 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 20.647742 sq. miles (53.477404 sq. km)
FIPS code: 07330
Located within: Arkansas (AR), FIPS 05
Location: 35.930735 N, 89.913940 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Blytheville, AR
Blytheville

Usage examples of "blytheville".

Corporate Headquarters, Arkansas International Jetport, Blytheville, Arkansas Several days later Little Bradley J.

Jon was still busy on the telephone, coordinating launch activities with his Blytheville headquarters.

CHAPTER OVER THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA, OFF THE COAST LIBYA THE NEXT AFTERNOON The flight had originated from Arkansas International Airport, Blytheville, Arkansas.

Patrick replied, giving the nickname the B-52 crews once used for Blytheville Air Force Base in rural northeastern Arkansas.

Dewayne had seen one inside a store window in Blytheville, and he’d strutted around school for an insufferable period of time.

The nearest liquor store was in Blytheville, though there were some bootleggers in the area who did quite well.

According to my father, they were headed to a large farm north of Blytheville, two hours away, where they would work for three or four weeks, weather permitting, and then go back to Mexico.

Dewayne had seen one inside a store window in Blytheville, and he'd strutted around school for an insufferable period of time.

The county had two cities, Blytheville and Osceola, and a host of towns dominated by planters who farmed huge plots of land.

It looked hopeless, but the county was too big to ignore, so I devoted one Saturday to working Blytheville and Osceola.

It was the only place in Mississippi County I carried, except for two black precincts in Blytheville that were turned the weekend before the election by a black funeral-home operator, LaVester McDonald, and the local newspaper editor, Hank Haines.

Hobbs said that after the beating, she’d called a relative in Blytheville, Arkansas, to report that she believed Terry had broken her jaw.

LaBelle continued, "I read just the other day about some senile old fool who wandered away from a nursing home over in Blytheville and was found three days later in the woods, stiff as a board.