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Bradshaw
/ ˈæˌʃɔː /
noun
a British railway timetable, published annually from 1839 to 1961
Word History and Origins
Origin of Bradshaw1
Example Sentences
Peter Bradshaw awarded it five stars in the Guardian, labelling it "wildly entertaining".
In a nod to the show’s fifth main character, New York City, Carrie Bradshaw spends the day reckoning with her love for a city that often tests her spirit.
Joe Bradshaw at Old Trafford: United boss Ruben Amorim bounced between standing on the balls of his feet like a coiled spring and relentlessly pacing his technical area, constantly barking out instructions and only pausing to drink from his bottle or usher coach Carlos Fernandes forward for both attacking and defensive set-pieces.
NFU president Tom Bradshaw said: "With the UK farming sector already under huge strain, with confidence at an all-time low and investment dropping day by day, it cannot deal with another trade deal which sells out domestic food and farming."
Dr Ceri Bradshaw, a psychologist at Swansea University, said there was a risk that people could be "easily tricked" by snappy, 60-second cleaning videos that in reality take hours of physical work.
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