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Harvard

[ hahr-verd ]

noun

  1. John, 1607–38, English clergyman in the U.S.: principal benefactor of Harvard College, now Harvard University.
  2. a city in central Massachusetts.
  3. Mount, a mountain in central Colorado, in the Sawatch Range. 14,420 feet (4,398 meters).


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Example Sentences

“I have to think her body type played a role,” said Rachel Greenblatt, a Lecturer in Jewish Studies at Harvard University.

HONG KONG—Last year, I met a Chinese graduate student on a tour of the northeastern United States before his first day at Harvard.

A Harvard-educated poet and professor, Linsker was arrested early Sunday morning and released without bail later that day.

Tom Cotton credits Harvard as the place where he “discovered political philosophy as a way of life.”

So why does the ‘Harvard of North Korea’ have a new website?

He was converted and baptized, and was the first Hebrew instructor at Harvard college.

John Thornton Kirkland, president of Harvard university, died, aged 70.

The formula for the date of its foundation in 1636 may be thus expressed—Harvard College founded; the chum age .

The one given in the present volume is a photographic facsimile of the Harvard original.

Edward Holyoke, president of Harvard college, died; an excellent mathematician and natural philosopher.

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