Lewis


[loo-is] /ˈlu ɪs/

noun
1.
a device for lifting a dressed stone, consisting of a number of pieces fitting together to fill a dovetailed recess cut into the stone.
[loo-is] /ˈlu ɪs/
noun
1.
Carl (Frederick Carlton Lewis) born 1961, U.S. track and field athlete.
2.
C(ecil) Day, 1904–72, British poet: poet laureate after 1968.
3.
C(live) S(taples)
[stey-puh lz] /ˈsteɪ pəlz/ (Show IPA), (“Clive Hamilton”) 1898–1963, English novelist and essayist.
4.
Edward, 1918–2004, U.S. biologist: Nobel Prize 1995.
5.
Gilbert Newton, 1875–1946, U.S. chemist.
6.
(Harry) Sinclair, 1885–1951, U.S. novelist, playwright, and journalist: Nobel Prize 1930.
7.
Henry, 1932–96, U.S. orchestral conductor.
8.
Isaac Newton, 1858–1931, U.S. soldier and inventor.
9.
Jerry Lee, born 1935, U.S. country-and-western and rock-‘n’-roll singer, musician, and composer.
10.
John (Aaron) 1920–2001, U.S. jazz pianist, composer, and musical director.
11.
John L(lewellyn) 1880–1969, U.S. labor leader.
12.
Matthew Gregory (“Monk Lewis”) 1775–1809, English novelist, dramatist, and poet.
13.
Meriwether
[mer-i-weth-er] /ˈmɛr ɪˌwɛð ər/ (Show IPA), 1774–1809, U.S. explorer: leader of the Lewis and Clark expedition 1804–06.
14.
(Percy) Wyndham
[win-duh m] /ˈwɪn dəm/ (Show IPA), 1884–1957, English novelist, essayist, and painter; born in the U.S.
15.
R(ichard) W(arrington) B(aldwin) 1917–2002, U.S. biographer, literary critic, and scholar.
16.
a male given name.
/ˈluːɪs/
noun
1.
a lifting device for heavy stone or concrete blocks consisting of a number of curved pieces of metal or wedges fitting into a dovetailed recess cut into the block
/ˈluːɪs/
noun
1.
the N part of the island of Lewis with Harris, in the Outer Hebrides. Pop: about 17 000 (2001). Area: 1634 sq km (631 sq miles)
/ˈluːɪs/
noun
1.
Carl. full name Frederick Carleton Lewis. born 1961, US athlete; winner of the long jump, 100 metres, 200 metres, and 4 × 100 metres relay at the 1984 Olympic Games; winner of the 100 metres in the 1988 Olympic Games; winner of the long jump in the 1992 and 1996 Olympic Games
2.
See Day-Lewis
3.
C(live) S(taples). 1898–1963, English novelist, critic, and Christian apologist, noted for his critical work, Allegory of Love (1936), his theological study, The Screwtape Letters (1942), and for his children’s books chronicling the land of Narnia
4.
Lennox. born 1965, Canadian and British boxer; won Olympic gold (1988) for Canada in the superheavyweight division; won various professional heavyweight titles between 1994 and 2004
5.
Matthew Gregory, known as Monk Lewis. 1775–1818, English novelist and dramatist, noted for his Gothic horror story The Monk (1796)
6.
Meriwether. 1774–1807, American explorer who, with William Clark, led an overland expedition from St Louis to the Pacific Ocean (1804–06)
7.
(John) Saunders (ˈsɔːndəz). 1893–1985, Welsh poet, dramatist, critic, and politician: founder (1926) and president (1926–39) of the Welsh Nationalist Party
8.
(Harry) Sinclair. 1885–1951, US novelist. He satirized the complacency and philistinism of American small-town life, esp in Main Street (1920) and Babbitt (1922): Nobel prize for literature 1930
9.
Wally. born 1959, Australian rugby league player; played 33 matches for Australia (1981–91), scoring 11 tries
10.
(Percy) Wyndham. 1884–1957, British painter, novelist, and critic, born in the US: a founder of vorticism. His writings include Time and Western Man (1927), The Apes of God (1930), and the trilogy The Human Age (1928–55)

masc. proper name, Anglo-French form of French Louis (see Louis).

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    noun, Chemistry. 1. any substance capable of forming a covalent bond with a base by accepting a pair of electrons from it. noun 1. a substance capable of accepting a pair of electrons from a base to form a covalent bond Compare Lewis base

  • Lewis and clark expedition

    A journey made by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, during the presidency of Thomas Jefferson, to explore the American Northwest, newly purchased from France, and some territories beyond. The expedition started from St. Louis, Missouri, and moved up the Missouri River and down the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean. The information that Lewis and […]

  • Lewis-and-harris

    noun 1. the northernmost island of the Hebrides, in NW Scotland. 825 sq. mi. (2135 sq. km).

  • Lewis-base

    noun, Chemistry. 1. any substance capable of forming a covalent bond with an acid by transferring a pair of electrons to it. noun 1. a substance capable of donating a pair of electrons to an acid to form a covalent bond Compare Lewis acid

  • Lewis-bolt

    noun, Building Trades. 1. an anchor bolt having a conical base around which concrete or lead is poured to hold it.


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