What's the difference between dearborn and wagon?

Dearborn


Definition:

  • (n.) A four-wheeled carriage, with curtained sides.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The community feels profiled for sure.” Per capita, Dearborn has the highest number of citizens on the federal government’s terrorism watch list, according to leaked FBI documents reported last year .
  • (2) Like the majority of Dearborn’s resident’s, Beydoun’s mother, Wanda, 46, voted for Bush in the 2000 election, attracted to the GOP’s appeal to family conservatism.
  • (3) Fort Dearborn, which is in the same zip code , seems to struggle with the same issues Mahalia Jackson does.
  • (4) Meanwhile, at Donutville USA in the Detroit suburb of Dearborn, two men said they were not going to let a little cold keep them from their morning cruller.
  • (5) Meanwhile Dearborn, due to its large Muslim population, has become the bête noire of Christian and conservatives radicals, caricatured as a city living under Sharia law or a hotbed of terrorist activity .
  • (6) Today, unfortunately, they don’t.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Fatina Abdrabboh, director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, Michigan regional office, poses for a photo outside her office in Dearborn, Michigan on Wednesday.
  • (7) Dearborn, Aya Beydoun’s hometown, has grown accustomed to a pervasive climate of Islamophobia.
  • (8) One has an intake which overlaps with both Fort Dearborn and Mahalia Jackson and one is identical.
  • (9) (Not least because while calculated at 30 to a classroom, the actual CPS target is 28 to a room) If the school closes, the plan is that the children will go to Fort Dearborn, a 13-minute walk away on the other side of the railway tracks.
  • (10) His view was echoed by John Dingell, a congressman representing the car manufacturing city of Dearborn, who said: "It is irresponsible during a time of economic crisis for the White House to insist that workers take further wage cuts on top of the historic concession they have already made."
  • (11) Abdrabboh’s work in Dearborn and the surrounding areas is focused on the everyday racism her clients face.
  • (12) Since 2006, Fort Dearborn's enrollment has plummeted by 45%.
  • (13) He’s trampling on our constitution and packaging it as a snake oil cure for our security concerns,” said Kassem Allie, executive administrator of the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn, Michigan, one of the largest mosques in the US.
  • (14) We Muslims have been the greatest victims of organisations like Isis and al-Qaida.” That much is clear in Dearborn where Beydoun, who turns 18 next year, is preparing to vote in her first presidential election.
  • (15) These correlations are based on data originally gathered and published by Dearborn, Rothney, and Shuttleworth as the Harvard Growth Study.
  • (16) Dagenham was once as much a Ford Motors company town as Dearborn, Michigan.
  • (17) It has a higher percentage of low income students than Mahalia Jackson but lower than Fort Dearborn and a lower percentage of special-education students than both.
  • (18) That’s counterproductive to our country.” Walking along the quiet streets of downtown Mount Clemens, Dwayne Johnson, a construction worker who lives in the city of Dearborn, said he believes re-negotiating new trade deals is a “great idea”.
  • (19) It was a dream.” Michnuk, who grew up in Detroit and now lives in bordering Dearborn, has seen stadiums come and go.

Wagon


Definition:

  • (n.) A wheeled carriage; a vehicle on four wheels, and usually drawn by horses; especially, one used for carrying freight or merchandise.
  • (n.) A freight car on a railway.
  • (n.) A chariot
  • (n.) The Dipper, or Charles's Wain.
  • (v. t.) To transport in a wagon or wagons; as, goods are wagoned from city to city.
  • (v. i.) To wagon goods as a business; as, the man wagons between Philadelphia and its suburbs.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) You wrote I Will Always Love You for Porter Wagoner, even though he had sued you.
  • (2) The danger is, in the face of western criticism and in the strong belief they have done more than most of their neighbours to be progressive, that they will now circle the wagons.
  • (3) Samples of fresh grass, wilted grass prior to and after ensiling in a stack silo and cut with either a cylinder-type forage harvester (11.3 mm of length cut) or a self-loading wagon (42.4 mm of length cut), wilted grass prior to and after ensiling in large round bales, and grass hay were obtained from the same field and used for determination of DM and CP degradability.
  • (4) Tractors accounted for one half of these machinery-related deaths, followed by farm wagons, combines, and forklifts.
  • (5) Individuals have decided to abandon their own families and jump on the Mandela wagon.
  • (6) Rail privatisation also saw the end of much domestic locomotive, wagon and carriage building – more workers on the scrapheap, more imports to further transform the balance of payments into a horror story.
  • (7) Although Knoller and the other young people in the wagon took it in turns to sit and stand, their efforts proved insufficient.
  • (8) "The meaning of the elections is: Italy can play a role; Italy is not the last wheel of the wagon; Italy is not the bottom of the class.
  • (9) The train now trundles through silent stations, its wagons free of the crowds of men, women and children who once clung to roofs and ladders.
  • (10) "The trains had 10 wagons and 100 people squeezed into each one," he says.
  • (11) If the wagons do start rolling in, I think there will be a massive upsurge,” he says.
  • (12) Nato thought better of hitching its wagon to the star of the hot-headed Georgian president.
  • (13) Gulnara Suleymanova and her family of five live in a wagon behind Baku’s prestigious new sports stadium, built especially for next month’s European Games.
  • (14) The wounded were being loaded into wagons; Wilfred managed to scramble up.
  • (15) If you then get the right of the party behaving in that way, that’s when you get real trouble and that’s the risk we’ve got at the moment: that there are some in the party all circling the wagon against Jeremy’s campaign.
  • (16) Secret Trump voters reverse their support: 'He seems to be insane' Read more As the Washington pundits and pollsters wrote them off, there was a sense of circling the wagons.
  • (17) She had become Snowflake’s unofficial welcome wagon, local therapist and advocate.
  • (18) "When resources are tight and all our inclinations are to pull the corporate wagons into a circle and fight to defend our own vested interests, that is exactly the time when we need to be at our boldest and most imaginative," he said.
  • (19) He was bundled into a wooden box which Roland had built specially for the job and then carried in a hand wagon to his Audi 8 car.
  • (20) 5.48pm BST Summary of today's events: - 196 bodies being stored in refrigerated railway wagons in Torez.

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