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Dickinson
[dik-in-suhn]
noun
Edwin (Walter), 1891–1978, U.S. landscape and still-life painter.
Emily (Elizabeth), 1830–86, U.S. poet.
John, 1732–1808, U.S. statesman and publicist.
a town in W North Dakota.
Dickinson
/ ˈɪɪԲə /
noun
Emily. 1830–86, US poet, noted for her short mostly unrhymed mystical lyrics
Example Sentences
Everton fans will have to wait until the second round of fixtures for their first league game at the Hill Dickinson Stadium, when they will face Brighton.
Even Dickinson’s dashes were erased from early publications of her work by editors who assumed readers would find them confusing.
“You have this pool of human resources that is poorly compensated and not utilized to their full potential,” said Elizabeth Dickinson, a Colombia analyst with the International Crisis Group, a nonprofit think tank.
Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, said retailers were passing on the costs of higher minimum wages and increased employer National Insurance contributions.
Dickinson plays a supporting part in “Urchin” as a feral bum who steals wallets and harangues shopkeepers, but what you really notice is his generous spirit.
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