Endecott


Also found in: Dictionary, Wikipedia.
Related to Endecott: John Endecott
Graphic Thesaurus  🔍
Display ON
Animation ON
Legend
Synonym
Antonym
Related
  • noun

Synonyms for Endecott

born in England

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Endecott has owned and operated Sign-Express since 1998, where his many years of sign experience flourished.
TAPM samples were individually ground and then passed through an Endecott 1.00-mm-aperture test sieve and collected in aluminium trays.
In a letter to John Endecott, Winthrop pressed the point of the patent:
THE METROS Clwb Ifor Bach, Cardiff Tel: 029 2023 2199 THE baby-faced London five-piece are hotly-tipped, having been signed by James Endecott, the man who signed The Libertines.
So does Vivienne Endecott of the Enid Blyton Society, who says: "I don't see how you can take the Famous Five out of their era, which is 1940s Britain.
171 - Brandon Romano, Ros, p Brian Endecott, NM, 1:52.
In September 1639, less than a year after his original sentence, William Andrews, "who was formerly com[m]itted to slavery for his ill & insolent carriage," was "released (upon his good carriage) from his slavery, & put to Mr Endecott." (53) Even so, Massachusetts Bay leaders demonstrated that they were ultimately dissatisfied with the use of slavery in criminal justice when they enacted the Body of Liberties in 1641, declaring that "there shall never be any bond-slavery, villenage or captivitie amongst us." (54)
They celebrated last night at a champagne-fuelled private party at The Colony Room private members club in London's Soho district with label boss James Endecott, producer Owen Morris and friends.
I've written a long play out of Hawthorne and Melville: "Endecott and the Red Cross," "Major Molineux," and "Benito Cereno"--three plays that make one and are called The Old Glory.
Lowell's twentieth-century verse play Endecott and the Red Cross, written during a moment of national crisis in the 1960s as part of a trio of one-acts he called The Old Glory, is less well known.
The weekends (which suit children over eight) have been put together by Vivienne Endecott who has researched the author's life for her own book, The Dorset Days of Enid Blyton.
Since the late 1980s, the Forensic Toxicology Research Section of the FAA's Civil Aeromedical Institute has consistently reported that alcohol is linked to 6% to 9% of fatal general aviation accidents yearly (Canfield, Hordinsky, Millett, Endecott, & Smith, 2000; Salazar & Antunano, 1994).
The following year a revised edition of The Old Glory was released, Endecott and the Red Cross premiered in New York, and in 1969, Prometheus Bound, together with Notebook 1967-68, was published.
In 1649 a farmer named John Endecott traded William Trask 500 apple trees for 200 acres of land.
In the laboratory, samples were filtered through a 50 [micro]m mesh Endecott sieve and quickly washed with running tap water to remove fine debris.