The Collaborative International Dictionary
Keever \Keev"er\, n. See Keeve, n.
Wikipedia
Keever may refer to:
- Charlie Keever (1980–1993), 13-year-old boy who was murdered in 1993, in San Diego County, California
- Jack Keever (1938–2004), American journalist and author, best known his coverage of Charles Whitman's 1966 shooting spree
- Patsy Keever (born 1947), American educator and Democratic politician
- Trijntje Keever (1616–1633), the tallest female person in recorded history, standing 2.54 metres (8 ft 4 in) tall
- Keever Jankovich (1928–1979), American football player
Usage examples of "keever".
Although Keever had been a guest at the hotel for only a few days, the bill ran close to two hundred dollars.
The new address that Keever gave was twenty blocks farther south, near the heart of Greenwich Village.
Paying off the driver, Keever alighted, suitcase in one hand, an evening newspaper in the other.
It served Keever as a residence only during those intervals between his big promotion deals.
There was another sound that Keever did not hear: the slight scrape of a key in the lock of the apartment door.
With back turned, he closed the door, loud enough for Keever to hear it.
An instant later, before Keever could make a move, the man was driving for him.
AS coolly as he had slain Keever, the man called Legrec completed other tasks.
While choking Keever, Legrec had kept his shoulders hunched, turning so that they partially obscured his face.
The Shadow had labeled Keever as a gilt-edged crook, whose tricky promotion methods were unsuspected by the law.
It followed that Keever would avoid alliances with criminals of a dangerous sort.
Balcray, Lysand, Keever - it seems incredible that those friends should have perished, separately, within the space of a few hours.
The whole case proved that Keever had known who Balcray and Lysand were, even though they might have known nothing about Keever.
Had Balcray and Lysand been innocent men, Legrec would not have needed to hide their deaths from Keever, himself a crook.
Knowing Balcray and Lysand for what they were, Keever had naturally become a problem, for he had inferred that he was slated for a similar fate.