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Atwood

[ at-wood ]

noun

  1. Margaret (Eleanor), born 1939, Canadian poet and novelist.


Atwood

/ ˈætwʊd /

noun

  1. AtwoodMargaret (Eleanor)1939FCanadianWRITING: poetWRITING: novelist Margaret ( Eleanor ) born 1939, Canadian poet and novelist. Her novels include Lady Oracle (1976), The Handmaid's Tale (1986), Alias Grace (1996), the Booker Prize-winning The Blind Assassin (2000), and Oryx and Crake (2003)


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Example Sentences

One of the rocks hit Krystyn Atwood, a black girl, and another hit Emily Harr, a white girl.

Tattoos with quotes from Margaret Atwood and Kurt Vonnegut line her body.

Misty White Sidell speaks to costume designer Colleen Atwood about the changes.

“I was relieved and happy that the reaction was positive, because it is an iconic film in the costume area,” Atwood explains.

Enter Garjan Atwood, a multi-talented digital artist who unveils an unusual new photographic project, in O sense.

The convives on this occasion were merely the admiral himself, Greenly, and Atwood.

"Sir Wycherly does not attend to his cases," put in Atwood, drily.

On this hint, Atwood resumed the pen, and the vice-admiral his duties.

Atwood's machine was the outcome of studies into the relations between force and a body to which force may be applied.

Your grandfather had a brother, Jemmy Atwood, who kept a china shop up Third street.

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atwitterAtwood's machine