Crossword clues for jacobs
jacobs
Wiktionary
n. (alternative form of Jacobs English)
Wikipedia
Jacobs may refer to:
People- Jacobs (surname), list of people with this name
- Jacobs, Louisville, Kentucky, USA
- Jacobs, Wisconsin, USA
- St. Jacobs, Ontario, Canada
- Jacobs School of Music, in Indiana University, Indiana, USA
- Jacobs University Bremen, in Germany
- Jacob's, biscuit and cracker brand in the UK and Ireland
- Jacobs (coffee), German company
- Jacobs Aircraft Engine Company, former American aircraft engine company
- Jacobs Engineering Group, American-based engineering company
- Jacobs Field, former name of Progressive Field in Cleveland, Ohio
- ST Jacobs, an Indonesian tug.
Jacobs is a brand of coffee that traces its beginnings to 1895 in Germany by Johann Jacobs and is today marketed in Europe by Douwe Egberts.
Jacobs is a patronymic medieval surname. Its origin is from the given name Jacob, derived from the Latin Jacobus, itself derived from the Hebrew language personal name Yaakov, from the Hebrew word akev ("heel"). It is a common in English speaking countries. There are many variant spellings. The first record of the surname is in 1244 in the " Cartularium Monasterii de Rameseia". People with the surname Jacobs include:
Usage examples of "jacobs".
He's expecting a visit from a couple of call girls – themselves the gamespace avatars of force-grown adult ghosts whose primaries may not be adult, or female, or even human – which is why he's flopped bonelessly back in his Arne Jacobsen recliner, waiting for something to happen.
The first pair, Lahmu and Lahamu (interpreted by Jacobsen [11] as the silt deposited at the junction of the sea and the rivers) gave birth to Anshar and Kishar, interpreted by the same scholar as the circular horizons of sky and earth.
Both were far to the south, behind Mount Jacobsen, and heading northwest toward Megapod Reserve HQ at Bella Coola.
The Canadian biologists who discovered a relict North American breeding band of the huge pongids in a remote valley west of Mount Jacobsen in British Columbia referred to them by the traditional name of Bigfoot and established the first refuge.