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Greene

[ green ]

noun

  1. Graham, 1904–91, English novelist and journalist.
  2. Nathanael, 1742–86, American Revolutionary general.
  3. Robert, 1558–92, English dramatist and poet.


Greene

/ ɡriːn /

noun

  1. GreeneGraham19041991MEnglishWRITING: novelistTHEATRE: dramatist Graham. 1904–91, English novelist and dramatist; his works include the novels Brighton Rock (1938), The Power and the Glory (1940), The End of the Affair (1951), and Our Man in Havana (1958), and the film script The Third Man (1949)
  2. GreeneRobert?15581592MEnglishWRITING: poetTHEATRE: dramatistWRITING: writer Robert. ?1558–92, English poet, dramatist, and prose writer, noted for his autobiographical tract A Groatsworth of Wit bought with a Million of Repentance (1592), which contains an attack on Shakespeare


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Example Sentences

More women in office could lead to political compromise, said Jehmu Greene, founding board member of Vote Run Lead.

Those were the last words Charlo Greene said as a reporter for KTVA TV in Anchorage, Alaska.

Zephyr Teachout lives in a fifth-floor walkup in Fort Greene, Brooklyn.

And that was before someone dressed like an Afghan soldier killed Maj. Gen. Harold Greene.

My Parents bought their first home in 1968, a Brownstone in Fort Greene, where my Father still lives.

Nathaniel Greene, an officer in the revolutionary army, died, aged 46.

How far Greene was able to substantiate his claim before the university is not recorded; he died in October, 1630.

In December Greene, a general of far greater ability than Gates, took the chief command in the south.

He determined to advance, hoping to get between Greene and Virginia, and force him to fight before he received reinforcements.

Fred Greene said, one September afternoon as they were watching eagerly and impatiently for some move to be made.

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