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Vallejo
[ vuh-ley-oh, -hoh; Spanish vah-ye-haw ]
noun
- é· [se, -sah, r], 1895–1938, Peruvian poet.
- Ma·ri·a·no Gua·da·lupe [mahr-ee-, ah, -noh gwahd-l-, oop, -, oo, -pee, mar-, mah-, ryah, -naw gwah-, th, ah-, loo, -pe], 1808–90, military and political leader in California, serving the Mexican government until 1846; elected senator to the first state legislature 1849.
- a city in western California, on San Pablo Bay, northeast of San Francisco.
Vallejo
/ -ˈleɪhəʊ; baˈʎɛxo; vəˈleɪəʊ /
noun
- Vallejoé (Abraham)18921938MPeruvianWRITING: poet é ( Abraham ) (ˈsesar). 1892–1938, Peruvian poet, living in France and Spain from 1923: noted for his experimental style in such works as Trilce (1922)
Example Sentences
The San Francisco Bay Ferry system put its largest ferries into service and urged people needing transport from Oakland, Alameda, Richmond and Vallejo to take them.
River, and the Food Bank of Contra Costa and Solano, which said it lost a $155,000 grant for a project to provide food to communities in need in Vallejo.
Jody Agius Vallejo and Manuel Pastor are professors of sociology at USC, where they direct the university’s Equity Research Institute.
In California, the 62 organizations and nonprofit groups that saw cuts include the Food Bank of Contra Costa and Solano, which lost a $155,000 grant for a project to provide food to communities in need in Vallejo, and the Community Water Center, a nonprofit focused on clean drinking water in the San Joaquin Valley, which lost a $20-million grant for an environmental justice program.
Not long after the obituary was published, Lasota resurfaced along with other members of the group in Vallejo, California, which is north of San Francisco.
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