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spencer
1[ spen-ser ]
noun
- a short, close-fitting jacket, frequently trimmed with fur, worn in the 19th century by women and children.
- a man's close-fitting jacket, having a collar and lapels and reaching just below the waist, worn in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
- an English wig of the 18th century.
Spencer
2[ spen-ser ]
noun
- a .52 caliber, lever-action repeating rifle and carbine patented in the U.S. in 1860 and used by the Union army and navy in the Civil War.
spencer
3[ spen-ser ]
noun
- a large gaff sail used abaft a square-rigged foremast or abaft the mainmast of a ship or bark.
Spencer
4[ spen-ser ]
noun
- Charles, 3rd Earl of Sunderland, 1674–1722, British statesman: prime minister 1718–21.
- Herbert, 1820–1903, English philosopher.
- Platt Rogers [plat], 1800–64, U.S. calligrapher and teacher of penmanship.
- a town in NW Iowa.
- a town in central Massachusetts.
- a male given name.
Spencer
1/ ˈɛԲə /
noun
- SpencerHerbert18201903MEnglishPHILOSOPHY: philosopher Herbert. 1820–1903, English philosopher, who applied evolutionary theory to the study of society, favouring laissez-faire doctrines
- SpencerSir Stanley18911959MEnglishARTS AND CRAFTS: painter Sir Stanley. 1891–1959, English painter, noted esp for his paintings of Christ in a contemporary English setting
spencer
2/ ˈɛԲə /
noun
- a short fitted coat or jacket
- a woman's knitted vest
spencer
3/ ˈɛԲə /
noun
- nautical a large loose-footed gaffsail on a square-rigger or barque
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of spencer1
Origin of spencer2
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of spencer1
Origin of spencer2
Example Sentences
“The news stations deliver is seen as a commodity today,” Magid Chief Operating Officer Jaime Spencer said in a recent interview.
“The reality is, if the product is good, they really don’t care who owns it,” Spencer said.
Their multi-million dollar home in Montecito, around two hours drive up the coast from Los Angeles, is secluded and well-guarded and they have kept their circle of loyal friends tight - among them, tennis star Serena Williams, as well as actress Abigail Spencer.
As did prominent white nationalist Richard Spencer, who claimed that Trump had “changed the game” after that tweet.
“Opening up space to talk about White South Africans—giving his base the permission to seriously discuss White dispossession—is a monumental achievement,” Spencer wrote.
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