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Lowrie

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

  • Allen Lowrie, West Australian botanist
  • Charles N. Lowrie, American landscape architect
  • Donald Lowrie (d.June 5, 1925), American newspaper writer
  • George Lowrie (1919–1989), Welsh footballer
  • Henry Berry Lowrie (c. 1844 – 1847-disappeared 1872), North Carolina outlaw
  • Jason Lowrie, New Zealand rugby league footballer
  • Jed Lowrie, infielder for the Oakland Athletics
  • John Patrick Lowrie, American voice actor
  • Matthew B. Lowrie (1773–1850), mayor of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Todd Lowrie (born 1983), Australian Rugby League player
  • Walter Lowrie (politician) (1784–1868), US senator from Pennsylvania
  • Walter H. Lowrie, chief justice of Pennsylvania's Supreme Court
  • William Lowrie (1857–1933), Australian agricultural educationist

Usage examples of "lowrie".

Old Lowrie McCall stood on the stairs, brandishing an ancient shotgun.

She knew now that she would rather face the police than let old Lowrie die.

Between rap music and sticking earrings in their bellies, Lowrie could never fathom normal kids, never mind phantom ones.

Band Aid, flopping to the tarmac beside a suddenly exhausted Lowrie McCall.

Being a pensioner like he was, Lowrie only had a pass for the second class, and so had to hold conversations with an invisible spirit while everybody watched.

And with that Lowrie pulled his cap over his eves and settled in for a snooze.

When the train pulled into Heuston Station, Lowrie was still dragging ragged breaths through his open mouth.

If poor old Lowrie had any idea what was going on, this would have killed him for sure.

Even Lowrie had a few layers knocked off his grumpy shell by sitting on the top deck.

Cicely Ward swanned on to the sound stage, and poor old Lowrie nearly fell out of his seat.

Cicely walked Lowrie to the gate, ostensibly to protect him from the twitching fingers of security.

Before Meg could protest, Lowrie set off hobbling across the road, his cigar bobbing like a drunken firefly.

The person he thought was Lowrie caught it dex-trously, spinning it on one finger like one of those basketball chaps.

The bus was packed, and as much as Lowrie put on the pathetic old-man face, he looked too suave in the new suit for anyone to offer him a seat.

Ball bustled down the hallway, gesturing over his shoulder for Lowrie to follow.