Crossword clues for macaulay
Wiktionary
n. (surname: English)
n. (surname from=Scottish Gaelic dot=) of Gaelic origin.
Wikipedia
Macaulay, Macauley, MacAulay, or McAulay may refer to:
Macaulay, Macauley, MacAulay, and McAulay are surnames in the English language. There are several etymological origins for the names: all of which originated as patronyms in several Gaelic languages— Irish and Scottish Gaelic. Although the English-language surnames are ultimately derived from Gaelic patronyms, the English-language surnames, and the modern Gaelic-language forms do not refer to the actual name of the bearer's father. In the United States, the surnames are not very common; according to census data, Macaulay and MacAulay (combined) are much more common than McAulay.
Usage examples of "macaulay".
I tried to think calmly back over the day, to pull it into perspective, and I kept bumping into Shannon Macaulay at every turn.
I had some connection with Macaulay I was no longer of any use to her.
I stared at a parboiled hand in a basin of water, looking for Macaulay, and found nothing at all.
Part of my mind had been occupied with the problem of getting Macaulay out of that house, and now I was starting to see at least part of the answer.
I got off him at last, and tried again to see Macaulay, running into the same old blank wall.
I was being paid, I reminded myself, to get Macaulay out ot that house alive, and not to lie there thinking about his wife.
Why had they kept trying to sweat Macaulay out of hiding so they could take him alive and make him tell, when they could have picked her up any time they pleased?
We wanted you to hurry a bit and get this boat for them so we could find where Macaulay was hiding.
This chap asked to have the cocoa brought up, and since he was ostensibly acting for Benson and Teen through the person of Macaulay, they brought it up.
As soon as he was back in the little Mexican port where the salvaged cargo was being landed, he called Macaulay by long-distance telephone.
They opened fire, killing the other man, but Macaulay got the plane off the water and escaped.
Perhaps you missed the little item in the paper, but just about five days after Macaulay took off, a fishing boat docked with a castaway it had picked up in a rubber life raft on the Campeche Bank.
I merely wrote Macaulay a letter two days ago and pointed out the advisability of telling her where it was.
I saw then what Macaulay must have gone through in those last few hours.
You had to assume, to begin with, that Macaulay had known where he was himself.