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Carr
[kahr]
noun
John Dickson, 1906–77, U.S. mystery writer.
carr
/ ɑː /
noun
an area of bog or fen in which scrub, esp willow, has become established
Word History and Origins
Origin of Carr1
Example Sentences
Paul Bradley Carr, a tech journalist turned Palm Springs bookstore owner and novelist, takes that possibility a step further in this provocative thriller by centering the action on StoicAI’s LLIAM, an AI algorithm that has become indispensable in everyday life.
Adams, who has played in the NFL with passers such as Aaron Rodgers, Derek Carr and Jimmy Garoppolo, sees the game “through a quarterback lens,” McVay said.
“Many people can say it’s really important for us to be all together for the last time before the World Cup,” said Pochettino, the first U.S. coach with a three-game losing streak in his first 10 games since Manfred Schellscheidt in 1975, according to statistician Paul Carr.
Trump also has a grip on congressional Republicans and the Federal Communications Commission is run by a Trump appointee, Brendan Carr, who in one of his first acts as chairman, opened a public inquiry into whether the “60 Minutes” edits rose to the level of news distortion.
Paramount needs Carr’s approval to transfer CBS television station licenses to the Ellison family.
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