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Hastings
[hey-stingz]
noun
Thomas, 1860–1929, U.S. architect.
Warren, 1732–1818, British statesman: first governor general of India 1773–85.
a seaport in E Sussex, in SE England: William the Conqueror defeated the Saxons near here on Senlac Hill 1066.
a city in S Nebraska.
a town in SE Minnesota.
Hastings
1/ ˈɪɪŋ /
noun
a port in SE England, in East Sussex on the English Channel: near the site of the Battle of Hastings (1066), in which William the Conqueror defeated King Harold; chief of the Cinque Ports. Pop: 85 828 (2001)
a town in New Zealand, on E North Island: centre of a rich agricultural and fruit-growing region. Pop: 71 100 (2004 est)
Hastings
2/ ˈɪɪŋ /
noun
Gavin. born 1962, Scottish Rugby Union footballer; played for Scotland (1986–95), scoring 667 points in 61 games
Warren. 1732–1818, British administrator in India; governor general of Bengal (1773–85). He implemented important reforms but was impeached by parliament (1788) on charges of corruption; acquitted in 1795
Example Sentences
Sure, go ahead and ask us to believe that John Wick’s lineage stretches back to Beowulf, the Battle of Hastings and the Great Schism.
All three defendants, who are from Hastings and St Leonards in East Sussex, could face the death penalty – the heaviest punishment for taking part in a drug transaction under Indonesian law.
Hastings was selected by Anthropic’s Long Term Benefit Trust, which the company describes as “five financially disinterested members” that can select and remove a portion of the board.
She wished she had introduced Hercule Poirot as a younger man, and was very happy to ditch Hastings for a while.
Yellow card for Hastings, penalty try awarded, and a mountain to climb for Warriors.
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