Find the word definition

Wikipedia
Cottrell

Cottrell is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Frank Cottrell Boyce, British screenwriter and novelist
  • Alan Cottrell, a British metallurgist and physicist
  • Anthony Cottrell, one of the investors in the Port Phillip Association
  • Chris Cottrell, an American entrepreneur
  • Con Cottrell, an Irish sportsperson
  • Frederick Gardner Cottrell, an American inventor and physical chemist
  • Graham Cottrell (born 1945), English cricketer and teacher
  • James La Fayette Cottrell, an American politician from Alabama
  • Jim Cottrell, an American football linebacker
  • Lance Cottrell, founder of Anonymizer, Inc. and the designer of the Mixmaster Protocol
  • Leonard Cottrell, a British writer and archaeologist
  • Louis Cottrell, Sr. (1878–1927), noted jazz drummer
  • Louis Cottrell, Jr. (1911–1978), noted jazz reedist
  • Myron Cottrell, the founder and owner of TPI Specialties
  • Peter Cottrell, British historian and novelist
  • Porter Cottrell, an American professional bodybuilder
  • Raymond Cottrell, a Seventh-day Adventist theologian
  • Robert Cottrell (1815–1880), coachbuilder and politician in South Australia
  • Stephen Cottrell, Bishop of Reading
  • T. J. Cottrell, an American football player
  • Ted Cottrell, a defensive coordinator for the San Diego Chargers
  • Thomas Cottrell, a Canadian politician from New Brunswick
  • William Cottrell, a convicted arsonist
  • Ann Cottrell Free, an American journalist

Usage examples of "cottrell".

Joyce Cottrell kept her house meticulously clean, immediately redecorating any room in which paint began to fade, choosing colors and fabrics from catalogs, finally venturing forth to make her purchases only when the newly redecorated room was complete in her mind down to the last detail.

But Joyce Cottrell had nice furniture, and everything looked clean and fresh, like it was brand-new.

Then, as it grew close to the time when Joyce Cottrell would come home from work, he slipped into the master bedroom.

Joyce Cottrell had stripped down to her underwear and moved to the closet to hang up her dress, the man was ready.

He talked as he worked, saying all the things to Joyce Cottrell that he had never been able to say to his mother.

Joyce Cottrell had truly belonged to him, taken like a trophy, dying at his hands like the prey of a hunter.

Coming at last to the corner of Sixteenth and Thomas, he had to resist the temptation to step into the emergency room and see who had replaced Joyce Cottrell at the reception desk.

In the morning, when the body was discovered, the first place the police would come would be here, to question whoever had relieved Joyce Cottrell, and the person would remember him.

He had found them not only in the bedroom, where it was obvious that Joyce Cottrell had been killed and partially disemboweled, but through most of the rest of the house as well.

According to police, the victim, Joyce Cottrell, was slain in her Capitol Hill home sometime between 11:00 p.

If the Davis and Cottrell murders are connected to the ones you claim Richard Kraven committed, where does that leave Kraven?

Joyce Cottrell, 57, was a receptionist in the emergency room at the Group Health facility on Capitol Hill.

Droplets of water glistened in the dark-brown depths and then fell to the floor at his feet as Cottrell carelessly scattered them with the movement of his large, blunt fingers.

For one thing, she would have to stop viewing Flint Cottrell as an annoying, intriguing, unsettling male to whom she was attracted.

And a part of her wanted to be friends with Cottrell, even though he could easily annoy her.