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Clayton

[ kleyt-n ]

noun

  1. John Middleton, 1796–1856, U.S. jurist and politician: senator 1829–36, 1845–49, 1853–56; secretary of state 1849–50.
  2. a city in E Missouri, near St. Louis.
  3. a male given name.


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Example Sentences

Clayton says they’ve raised the retail price of it by around $10 per copy to account for rising shipping costs.

From Time

Bearsun gets worn out sometimes, as seen in this yawnfest shot at a hotel in Clayton, New Mexico.

My dad, Jack Tuholske, grew up in Clayton, Missouri, a suburb of Saint Louis.

Clayton, who plans to step down by the end of the year, will also be gone before any regulation is finished.

From Fortune

The downside, Clayton says, is that they generally only carry about 60 to 100 megabits per second.

Clayton businesses and buildings are preparing for lockdowns as the Buzz Westfall Center in Clayton where the grand jury meets.

I work at a law firm in Clayton, Mo., where they are holding the grand jury for the case.

Protest leaders talk of boycotting and marching through Clayton again to shut down area businesses.

This Jack Clayton adaptation of The Turn of the Screw is one of the rare pictures that does justice to Henry James.

On August 18, an IED killed Private First Class Morris Walker and Staff Sergeant Clayton Bowen during a reconnaissance mission.

And so did Val Clayton, who also came that year, merely in order to see what sort of vermouth they sold at the other hotels.

The window, which is by Clayton & Bell, is very pleasing in colour.

In accordance with this agreement the famous Bulwer-Clayton Treaty was completed.

George Arnold and his friend Clayton lingered with half humorous tolerance upon the outskirts of the crowd.

After a little, the Salvationists made ready to depart, and Arnold and Clayton turned away.

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