Crossword clues for boyce
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 485
Land area (2000): 0.531370 sq. miles (1.376243 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.051377 sq. miles (0.133066 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.582747 sq. miles (1.509309 sq. km)
FIPS code: 09165
Located within: Louisiana (LA), FIPS 22
Location: 31.386778 N, 92.670577 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 71409
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Boyce
Housing Units (2000): 168
Land area (2000): 0.361048 sq. miles (0.935111 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.361048 sq. miles (0.935111 sq. km)
FIPS code: 08984
Located within: Virginia (VA), FIPS 51
Location: 39.093118 N, 78.059190 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 22620
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Boyce
Wikipedia
Boyce may refer to:
Boyce is a character in the British sitcom Green Wing, played by Oliver Chris.
Boyce is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Ann Boyce (1827–1914), New Zealand pioneer and herbalist
- Cameron Boyce (born 1999), American actor
- Christopher John Boyce (born 1953), American who sold spy satellite secrets to the USSR
- Darryl Boyce (born 1984), Canadian ice hockey player currently with the Toronto Marlies of the AHL
- Emmerson Boyce (born 1979), English footballer
- Frank Cottrell Boyce (born 1959), British writer
- Frank M. Boyce (1851–1931), New York politician
- George Boyce (disambiguation), several people
- James F Boyce (1868–1935), American industrial chemist
- James H. Boyce (1922-1990), American politician
- James Petigru Boyce (1827–1888), theologian and Southern Seminary founder
- Kevin Boyce (born 1971), American Democrat, former Ohio State Treasurer
- Mary Boyce (1920–2006), British scholar of Iranian languages, and an authority on Zoroastrianism
- Mary Cunningham Boyce, American academic and engineer
- Max Boyce (born 1943), Welsh singer and comedian
- Michael Boyce (disambiguation), several people
- Raymond F. Boyce (died 1974), co-inventor of relational database query language SQL
- Samuel Boyce (died 1775), dramatist and poet
- Sue Boyce (born 1951), Australian politician, businesswoman and disability advocate
- Tommy Boyce (1939–1994), one of the American songwriters Boyce and Hart
- William Boyce (disambiguation), several people
Usage examples of "boyce".
Perri was thin and wiry, but at first glance he and Boyce could have been father and son.
Spock immediately started scanning for life-forms and mapping their genetic code, while Boyce busied himself with determining each organism’s role in the food chain.
I let Spock and Boyce go over it while we prepared the shuttle, and they figured out where the gaps in their knowledge were so we were able to target our mission a little more accurately than we had the first time.
Colt and Boyce sat in the back, monitoring the additional scanning equipment that the engineering crew had added to the hull.
Occasionally Spock would say, “I read a denser concentration of hydroplankton,” or Boyce would say, “There’s a subspecies of filter-fish here,” and when we passed near a kraken or a moon they would grow busy for a few minutes scanning that, but as time passed it became clear there was little new to discover.
Spock and Boyce continued to scan the moon below us and surrounding space for life-forms, but the rest of us had little to do besides sit in our chairs and talk about what we had seen so far.
We had removed the last couple meters of one, and Boyce had blown another one off at the base, but that still left it ten good ones to fight with.
I noticed that Boyce was helping Colt, who held her arms close to her chest.
I tugged myself down to the mottled gray titan hide by my safety line and pulled myself over to Colt, who had curled into a loose fetal position beside the kraken eggs, which Boyce had tied down as well.
Colt lay on her back on an exam table, unconscious, her suit in shreds beneath her where Boyce had cut it away.
There had to be some corruption somewhere otherwise Bishop Boyce would never have obtained outline planning permission for a hundred houses on that tract.
Yet, Boyce told himself, it might be all right for a mere vicar to spew in public, his complexion a greenish hue, but it was not becoming for a bishop, the head of the diocese.
Once back in his limousine, his chauffeur having been instructed to return to the palace, Boyce pulled a cigar out of his leather case, expertly bit off the end and spat it through the partly open window with no small degree of accuracy.
A gift bestowed upon one by God and it was not the place of a humble clergyman to spurn that gift, as Bishop Boyce had pointed out to Vicar Cleehopes.
In some ways he reminded Boyce of a western gunfighter, only a thousand times more dangerous.