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Gazetteer
Edmond, OK -- U.S. city in Oklahoma
Population (2000): 68315
Housing Units (2000): 26380
Land area (2000): 85.136765 sq. miles (220.503201 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 2.812523 sq. miles (7.284402 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 87.949288 sq. miles (227.787603 sq. km)
FIPS code: 23200
Located within: Oklahoma (OK), FIPS 40
Location: 35.657154 N, 97.464916 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 73013 73034
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Edmond, OK
Edmond
Edmond, KS -- U.S. city in Kansas
Population (2000): 47
Housing Units (2000): 31
Land area (2000): 0.164793 sq. miles (0.426812 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.164793 sq. miles (0.426812 sq. km)
FIPS code: 19875
Located within: Kansas (KS), FIPS 20
Location: 39.627105 N, 99.820722 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 67636
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Edmond, KS
Edmond
Wikipedia
Edmond

Edmond may refer to:

People
  • Edmond Canaple
  • Edmond de Goncourt
  • Edmond Halley
  • Edmond Rostand
  • Edmond James de Rothschild
  • Edmond O'Brien
  • Edmond Panariti
Places

In the United States:

  • Edmond, Kansas
  • Edmond, Oklahoma
  • Edmonds, Washington
  • Edmond, West Virginia
Other uses
  • Edmond (1833), a passenger sailing ship that sank off the coast of Kilkee, Co. Clare in 1850 with the loss of 98 lives.
  • Edmond (play), a 1982 play by David Mamet
  • Edmond (film), a 2005 film based on the 1982 play
  • Edmond Dantès, fictional character in The Count of Monte Cristo
  • Edmond (racehorse), the joint favourite for the 2001 Grand National
Edmond (play)

Edmond is a one-act play written by David Mamet. It premiered at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago, on June 4, 1982. The first New York production was October 27 of the same year, at the Provincetown Playhouse. The play consists of twenty-three short scenes. In the original production, each of the actors took on multiple roles, save the two playing Edmond and his wife. Kenneth Branagh starred as Edmond in a production of the play in London in 2003.

A movie based upon the play, starring William H. Macy and Julia Stiles, has been shown at some film festivals in the U.S. and Europe, and underwent limited U.S. release on July 14, 2006.

Edmond (film)

Edmond is a 2005 American drama film directed by Stuart Gordon and starring William H. Macy, based on the 1982 play Edmond by David Mamet. Mamet also wrote the screenplay for the film. Edmond features Julia Stiles, Rebecca Pidgeon, Denise Richards, Mena Suvari, Joe Mantegna, Bai Ling, Jeffrey Combs, Dylan Walsh and George Wendt in supporting roles. It was screened at several film festivals from September 2005 to May 2006, and had a limited release on July 14, 2006.

Usage examples of "edmond".

And here, even though only they will know why their love and loyalty have special meaning for me, I want to thank Easter Straker, Mary Porter, Glenn Smith, Sara Pilcher, Clara Marie Gould, Ruby Wilson, Emma Gibson, Freddie Wright, Cathy Hively, Rosalie Kelly, Bob Summer, Gene Greniker, Rosemary Holton, Fred and Sara Bentley, Grace Wolff, Ann Hyman, Dena Snodgrass, Faith Brunson, Sarah Bell Edmond, Jimmie Harnsberger, Marian Seidel, my sister-in-law' Millie Price, Cindy and Mike Birdsong and tribe, and a beautiful St.

Matthew Edmonds decided that after chores and breakfast he’d fix up his plow.

Jane Edmonds was spooning oatmeal into Nellie, not quite one, while four-year-old William stood on a stool and manfully pumped water into a kettle fresh off the stove.

They’d be scandalized to know young Jacob Edmonds was dressed and mucked like that.

Presently Edmonds made out the Little Dipper and Polaris in it, that guided north toward freedom.

Langford, who admitted he was an Indian, and black Miss Edmonds, all different from each other and from everybody else.

Better than any maybe unless it was Carothers Edmonds on whose place Lucas lived seventeen miles from town, because he had eaten a meal in Lucas’ house.

It was cold for another day or two, then it got warm, the wind softened then the bright sun hazed over and it rained yet he still walked or stood about the street where the store windows were already filling with toys and Christmas goods and fireworks and colored lights and evergreen and tinsel or behind the steamy window of the drugstore or barber­shop watched the country faces, the two packages—the four two-for-a-quarter cigars for Lucas and the tumbler of snuff for his wife—in their bright Christmas paper in his pocket, until at last he saw Edmonds and gave them to him to deliver Christmas morning.

Nor did he bother, take time to wonder then how his uncle (obviously Edmonds had told him) happened to know about it because he was already counting rapidly backward.

And that was the first time he had ever seen Lucas without the hat on and in the same second he realised that with the possible exception of Edmonds they there in the street watching him were probably the only white people in the county who had ever seen him uncovered: watching as, still bent over as he had emerged from the car, Lucas began to reach stiffly for the hat.

And not just for Gowrie but for all: Stevens and Mallison and Edmonds and McCaslin too.

Walters was up and dressed, having taken a call from Don Edmonds, Director of the Bureau.

Hell, Miss Edmonds was the first person he’d met, male or female, who had brought the question out in the open and given him the opportunity to deny the charges.

Kane Edmonds, a brilliant scientist respected in star systems from here to Vegas, was believed to be a madwoman by the very man she loved.

Kane Edmonds, planabotonologist of NASA currently in England, planet Earth, 1776 AD.