Crossword clues for montague
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 609
Land area (2000): 1.785858 sq. miles (4.625352 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.785858 sq. miles (4.625352 sq. km)
FIPS code: 48690
Located within: California (CA), FIPS 06
Location: 41.727168 N, 122.526468 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 96064
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Montague
Housing Units (2000): 1075
Land area (2000): 2.659231 sq. miles (6.887376 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.542766 sq. miles (1.405757 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 3.201997 sq. miles (8.293133 sq. km)
FIPS code: 55100
Located within: Michigan (MI), FIPS 26
Location: 43.415389 N, 86.362393 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 49437
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Montague
Housing Units (2000): 9862
Land area (2000): 930.661981 sq. miles (2410.403362 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 7.775722 sq. miles (20.139027 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 938.437703 sq. miles (2430.542389 sq. km)
Located within: Texas (TX), FIPS 48
Location: 33.664571 N, 97.742881 W
Headwords:
Montague, TX
Montague County
Montague County, TX
Wikipedia
Montague may refer to:
Montague is a light rail station operated by Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA). This station is served by VTA's Alum Rock–Santa Teresa line.
The station opened in 2004 as part of the second phase of VTA's Tasman East light rail extension.
Montague is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Sir Anderson Montague-Barlow, 1st Baronet (1868–1951), British barrister and Conservative Party politician
- Andrew Jackson Montague (1862–1937), 44th Governor of Virginia 1902–1906 and US Congressman 1912–1937
- Andrew Montague (Irish politician), Lord Mayor of Dublin 2011–2012
- Ashley Montague (1905–1999), British-American anthropologist and humanist
- Ben Montague, British musician and singer-songwriter
- Bruce Montague (born 1939), British actor
- Charles Edward Montague (1867–1928), British journalist and author
- Daniel Montague (1867-1912), United States Navy sailor and recipient of the Medal of Honor (Spanish–American War)
- Darrell Montague (born 1987), American mixed martial artist
- Diana Montague (born 1953), British opera mezzo-soprano concert singer
- Edward Francis "Ed" Montague (1905–1988), US Major League Baseball infielder, later scout
- Edward Michael "Ed" Montague (born 1948), US Major League Baseball umpire, son of the baseball player
- Edward Wortley Montague (1713–1776), British Member of Parliament, author and traveller
- Edwin Herbert Montague (1885–1937), British olympic athlete
- Edwin Samuel Montagu (1879–1924), British Liberal politician
- Eleanor Montague (born 1926), American radiologist and educator; member of the Texas Women's Hall of Fame
- Evelyn Aubrey Montague (1900–1948), British olympic athlete and journalist, son of Charles Edward Montague
- Fred Montague (1864–1919), British silent film actor
- Frederick Montague, 1st Baron Amwell (1876–1966), British Labour Party politician
- Henry James Montague, stage name for Henry James Mann (1844–1878), British-born American actor
- James Montague (1568–1618), English bishop
- James "Jimmy" Montague (1873–1941), American journalist, satirist and poet
- James Piotr Montague (born 1979), British writer and journalist
- John Montague (poet) (born 1929), US-born Irish poet and writer
- John Montague (baseball) (born 1947) US Major League Baseball pitcher
- John Montague (golfer) (1903–1972), American golfer
- Lee Montague (born 1927), British actor
- Margaret Prescott Montague (1878–1955), American short story writer and novelist
- Michael Montague, Baron Montague of Oxford (1932–1999), British businessman and politician
- Monte Montague, stage name for Walter H. Montague (1891–1959), American film actor
- Nathaniel "Magnificent" Montague (born 1928), American R&B disc jockey
- Read Montague (born 1960), American neuroscientist and popular science author
- Richard Montague (1930–1971), American mathematician and philosopher; creator of the "Montague grammar" approach to natural language semantics
- Robert Latane Montague (1819–1880), American politician from Virginia who served in the Confederate States Congress
- Robert Miller Montague (1899–1958), Lieutenant General in the United States Army
- Robert Montague (born 1965), Jamaican politician in the Jamaica Labour Party
- Ross Montague (born 1988), British professional footballer
- Samuel L. Montague (1829–1869), American politician, active in Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Samuel S. Montague (1830–1883), American railway pioneer, responsible for building the western half of the First Transcontinental Railroad
- Sarah Montague (born 1966), British radio journalist and Today presenter
- Stephen Montague (born 1943), American composer
- Walter Humphries Montague (1858–1915), Canadian politician in the Conservative Party of Canada
- William Pepperell Montague (1873–1953), American professor of philosophy at Berkeley and Columbia
Montague was an American Thoroughbred racehorse. He won the 1890 Preakness Stakes.
Montague is a male given name. Notable people with the name include:
- Montague Ainslie
- Montague Aldous
- Monty Banks
- Sir Montague Barlow
- Montague Bertie, 11th Earl of Lindsey
- Montague Bertie, 12th Earl of Lindsey
- Montague Birch
- Montague Browning
- Montague Burton
- Montague Burton Professor of International Relations
- Montague Chambers
- Montague Chamberlain
- Sir Montague Cholmeley, 1st Baronet of the Cholmeley baronets
- Sir Montague Cholmeley, 2nd Baronet of the Cholmeley baronets
- M. Graham Clark
- Montague John Druitt
- Montague James Furlong, boxer commonly known as Jim Hall
- Montague Harry Holcroft
- Montague James Mathew
- Sir Montagu Aubrey Rowley Cholmeley, 4th Baronet of the Cholmeley baronets
- Sir Montague John Cholmeley, 6th Baronet of the Cholmeley baronets
- Montague Dawson
- Montague Eliot, 8th Earl of St Germans
- Montague Fordham
- Montague Glover
- Montague Gore
- Montague Guest
- Montague Hambling
- M. R. James
- Montague Lessler
- Montagu Love
- Montague Miller
- Montague Modlyn
- Montague Muir-Mackenzie
- Montague Napier
- Montague Noble
- Montague Ongley
- Monte Pfeffer
- Monty Porter
- Montague Scott
- Montague Shearman
- Montague Edward Smith
- Montague Sturt
- Montague Summers
- Montague Tyrwhitt-Drake
- Montague Ullman
- Montague Waldegrave, 5th Baron Radstock
- Monty Wedd
- Monty Westmore
- Montague White
- Montague Williamson
- Montague Wilmot
- Montague Woodhouse, 5th Baron Terrington
- Montague Younger
Usage examples of "montague".
We swabbed envelopes and stamps at the West Sussex Record Office, where Ellen Cobden Sickert’s family archives - and, coincidentally, some of Montague John Druitt's family archives - are kept.
Her white hull, the luxurious pastel-painted staterooms, and the plush dining room and cocktail lounge had always given Montague the impression of a dowager whose wrinkles were hidden skillfully under heavy makeup and at least three face-lifts.
Once I dashed a couple of furlongs down Old Montague Street into Baker's Row, drawn as on the night of the Double Event by the scent of blood, but discovered only a stabbed man of middle years with his pockets turned out: a matter in which the police were certain to take an interest, but not one, I was confident, that concerned me.
His rough estimations had sent his brows rising high—the amount had been startling enough to suggest Montague might be able to trace it.
He was excused from taking the oath by Graves, who acted on the well-known theory that judges are incapable of fibbing, and he gave his account of all my sins and omissions to Montague Varian, Q.
The assignment to clear the Montague System of the ragtag remnants of Citizen General Adrian Carson's forces had been the commodore's first real solo operation, and it sounded as if he'd passed his graduation exercise with flying colors.
Indeed, as we went down Old Montague Street, Arnold fell in with us, and he and I kept double vigil on Jack till the sky began to grow light.
He wished he could dismiss it as maudlin gloom fueled by alcohol, but scotch had no more effect on Montague than wine has on a Frenchman.
Sober, he would have known that no human beings could be less alike than Tessie Kearns and the Montague girl.
Montague was worried that his photographic skills might be on the same level as his manual dexterity, but most of the shots—.
And this is how it came about that the cautious old Squire Montague was drawn into this young fellow's speculation, and began to have his serene old age disturbed by anxieties and by the hope of a great stroke of luck.
And after Stamm had killed Greeff and mutilated him exactly as he had mutilated Montague, he took him down to the pot-holes in the wheelbarrow, over the sandy ground along the foot of the cliff, where he would not attract the attention of any guard that might have been stationed on the East Road.
Montague loved the old building with its Spanish chestnut roof and huge, sturdy interior beams.
The Montague girl would see that the leading man who had done so much to insure the success of Baird's striving for the worth-while drama was not unforgetful of her favours and continuous solicitude.
And while I'm sure Dee would have provided yeoman service as Ladies Montague or Capulet, and could probably have taken a creditable swing at the Nurse, the prospect of Juliet had turned her pale green.