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cicely
1[sis-uh-lee]
noun
plural
ciceliesa plant, Myrrhis odorata, of the parsley family, having a fragrant aroma and sometimes used as a potherb.
Cicely
2[sis-uh-lee]
noun
a female given name, form of Cecilia.
cicely
/ ˈɪəɪ /
noun
short for sweet cicely
Word History and Origins
Origin of cicely1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cicely1
Example Sentences
Specialized care for the dying was introduced to the U.S. in 1963, when Yale University’s then dean Florence Wald invited Dame Cicely Saunders of the U.K. to participate in a visiting lecture at Yale.
Still, the park service superintendent at the time, Cicely Muldoon, insisted the agency was committed to maintaining the ranches.
He joined an ensemble cast with Cicely Tyson in the off-Broadway production of Jean Genet’s “The Blacks” in 1961.
And there are the mass requiems, when Cicely Tyson died, when Aretha Franklin died, when Michael K. Williams died, when Harry Belafonte died, when there were riots going on after public killings, when Sly Stone reappeared with an autobiography and got some of his masters back in court, when Ye tweeted “everybody knows Get Out is about me” and made the Sunken Place a kind of headquarters for those too famous to be traced back to their civilian lives.
“We are hopeful that our test pilot for 2024 will prove fruitful in providing a great visitor experience and protecting these resources, which is what we try to do every day here,” said Yosemite Superintendent Cicely Muldoon during a public meeting on the plan in February.
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