Definition & Meaning | English word DRUMMOND
DRUMMOND
Definitions of DRUMMOND
- A Scottish habitational surname from Scottish Gaelic for someone from any of several places in Scotland.
- A hamlet near in Evanton, Highland, Scotland (OS grid ref NH6065).
- A number of places in USA:
- A village and parish in New Brunswick, Canada
- A town in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
- A locality in the Shire of Hepburn, central, Victoria, Australia.
- A settlement in Southland, New Zealand.
Number of letters
8
Is palindrome
No
Examples of Using DRUMMOND in a Sentence
- An influential teen idol of the late 1970s and early 1980s, she played Kimberly Drummond on the sitcom Diff'rent Strokes (1978–1986).
- The rule was created in reaction to the acquittal in 1843 of Daniel M'Naghten on the charge of murdering Edward Drummond.
- The youngest of three sons, he was born in Dunfermline Abbey to King Robert III and Annabella Drummond.
- Douglas was born in Scone, Perthshire, the second son of John Douglas, a stonemason, and Jean Drummond.
- The money represented the bulk of the K Foundation's funds that had been previously earned by Drummond and Cauty as the KLF.
- The settlement was named Perth in honour of acting Governor-General Sir Gordon Drummond, whose ancestral home was Perthshire.
- Peaine Township is one of only seven municipalities in the state of Michigan to consist entirely of islands, including Grosse Ile Township, Drummond Township, Bois Blanc Township, Mackinac Island, St.
- James Township is one of only seven municipalities in the state of Michigan to consist entirely of islands, including Grosse Ile Township, Drummond Township, Bois Blanc Township, Mackinac Island, Peaine Township, and Sugar Island Township.
- Sugar Island Township is one of only seven municipalities in the state of Michigan to consist entirely of islands, including Grosse Ile Township, Drummond Township, Bois Blanc Township, Mackinac Island, Peaine Township, and St.
- James Township, Drummond Township, Bois Blanc Township (in northern Michigan, not to be confused with the nearby Bois Blanc Island, which is in Canada), Mackinac Island, Peaine Township, and Sugar Island Township.
- They changed the town name from Edwardsville to Drummond, after either a Northern Pacific engineer or Hugh Drummond, a local trapper.
- Perth Amboy was settled in 1683 by Scottish colonists and was called "New Perth" after James Drummond, 4th Earl of Perth; the native name was eventually corrupted and the two names were merged.
- The area that is now Interlaken was purchased in 1667 by Gavin Drummond from the Lenape Native Americans.
- Tradition says Peter Drummond and Daniel McAlpin were early settlers, but, as Loyalists, they fled as the Revolutionary War came closer to the area.
- The Marland Filling Station, the Hominy School, the Hominy Osage Round House, the Hominy Armory, the Fred and Adeline Drummond House, and the Bank of Hominy are all on the National Register of Historic Places.
- Unincorporated communities in Horton Township include Brockport, Cartwright, Shawmut, Horton City, Drummond, Helen Mills, Challenge, Elbon, Brandy Camp, and Beech Grove.
- Bulldog Drummond is a 1929 American pre-Code crime film in which Hugh "Bulldog" Drummond helps a beautiful young woman in distress.
- Under George Gordon Drummond he commanded the batteries at the Siege of Fort Erie and was mentioned twice in dispatches.
- In 1893, Edward Drummond Libbey exhibited a dress at the World's Columbian Exposition incorporating glass fibers with the diameter and texture of silk fibers.
- However, the festival also welcomes anyone who the organisers believe 'speaks for justice', and has had Anita Roddick, Peter Tatchell, Bill Drummond, and Billy Bragg sharing their thoughts.
- The group's line-up comprised James Hackett (vocals), Pauline Hynds Bari (vocals), John Scally (guitar), Chris Quinn (drums), Matthew Drummond (guitar) and James Moody (bass).
- He is credited with founding the Church with friend Philo Drummond in 1979, though Stang himself denied this and claimed the organization was founded in 1953 by J.
- James Drummond Dole (September 27, 1877 – May 20, 1958), the "Pineapple King", was an American industrialist who developed the pineapple industry in Hawaii.
- Private contractors such as future sugar refining entrepreneur John Redpath, Thomas McKay, Robert Drummond, Thomas Phillips, Andrew White and others were responsible for much of the construction, and the majority of the actual work was done by thousands of Irish, Scottish, and French-Canadian labourers.
- Drummond and Jimmy Cauty reappeared in 2017 as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, releasing the novel 2023, and rebooting an earlier campaign to build a "People's Pyramid".
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