Caitlin
a female given name, Irish form of Cathleen, Kathleen.
Contemporary Examples
Pentagon Moves to Block Russian Spy Plane in American Skies Eli Lake April 17, 2014
Edward Snowden and What It Takes for an American to Get Asylum Caitlin Dickson June 10, 2013
Republican Benghazi Report Alleges State Department Coverup Eli Lake April 22, 2013
Lululemon Discovers What Men Have Always Known: Yoga Pants Are See-Through Misty White Sidell March 18, 2013
Sen. Ben Nelson’s Retirement Signals Twilight of Blue Dog Democrats John Avlon December 27, 2011
After Sandy, the American Red Cross Collects Both Criticism and Cash Lizzie Crocker, Caitlin Dickson November 23, 2012
‘The Good Wife’: Robert and Michelle King on Alicia, Kalinda, Renewal Prospects, and More Jace Lacob March 11, 2012
French President François Hollande Goes to Washington Tracy McNicoll May 17, 2012
‘The Good Wife’: Robert and Michelle King on Alicia, Kalinda, Renewal Prospects, and More Jace Lacob March 11, 2012
Cremains of the Day Jessica Ferri October 9, 2014
Read Also:
- Caius
Saint, died a.d. 296, pope 283–296. Historical Examples Ulric the Jarl William O. Stoddard “Unto Caesar” Baroness Emmuska Orczy Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 4 Various Buried Cities: Pompeii, Olympia, Mycenae Jennie Hall History of Rome, Vol III Titus Livius Buried Cities: Pompeii, Olympia, Mycenae Jennie Hall “Unto Caesar” Baroness Emmuska Orczy The […]
- Sallust
(Caius Sallustius Crispus) 86–34 b.c, Roman historian. Contemporary Examples The Novelist Who Spied: How Dennis Wheatley Helped Defeat the Nazis Tina Rosenberg August 7, 2012 The Novelist Who Spied: How Dennis Wheatley Helped Defeat the Nazis Tina Rosenberg August 7, 2012 The Novelist Who Spied: How Dennis Wheatley Helped Defeat the Nazis Tina Rosenberg August […]
- Cajal
noun Santiago Ramon y. 1852–1934, Spanish histologist, a pioneer of modern neurophysiology: shared the Nobel prize for medicine 1906. Historical Examples A History of Science, Volume 4(of 5) Henry Smith Williams
- Cajan
a member of a group of people living in parts of the South, especially Alabama, whose ancestry is a mixture of white, black, and possibly Indian. Cajun. a member of a group of people with an enduring cultural tradition whose French Catholic ancestors established permanent communities in Louisiana and Maine after being expelled from Acadia […]
- Cajeput
a tree, Melaleuca leucadendron, of the myrtle family, native to Australia and New Guinea, having papery bark and yielding a greenish, aromatic oil (cajeput oil) used in medicine and perfumes. Historical Examples The Western World W.H.G. Kingston Cooley’s Cyclopdia of Practical Receipts and Collateral Information in the Arts, Manufactures, Professions, and Trades…, Sixth Edition, Volume […]