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Fairfax

[ fair-faks ]

noun

  1. Thomas 3rd Baron Fairfax of Cameron, 1612–71, British general: commander in chief of the parliamentary army 1645–50.
  2. Thomas 6th Baron Fairfax of Cameron, 1692–1782, English colonist in Virginia.
  3. a town in NE Virginia.
  4. a male given name.


Fairfax

/ ˈfɛəfæks /

noun

  1. FairfaxThomas16121671MEnglishMILITARY: generalPOLITICS: statesman Thomas, 3rd Baron Fairfax. 1612–71, English general and statesman: commanded the Parliamentary army (1645–50), defeating Charles I at Naseby (1645). He was instrumental in restoring Charles II to the throne (1660)


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Example Sentences

That monster proved to be the same person who attacked the woman in Fairfax.

He takes adult classes at Fairfax High School in Los Angeles and works at a furniture store.

As he walked to his car and I turned right onto Fairfax Avenue, I honked my horn.

Jacqueline Stellar from Fairfax, Virginia, expressed the same sentiment.

Fairfax County, the most populous jurisdiction in the state, was once a Republican bastion.

General Stoughton was in charge of an army of cavalry, infantry, and artillery, with headquarters at Fairfax Court-house.

Hooker had swung the army up to Fairfax and Centreville, moving on an inner circle, with Washington for a pivot.

In Fairfax county, Washington presided at a spirited meeting, and headed a subscription paper with his own gift of fifty pounds.

Lancelot's brother, George Fairfax Lee, had inherited their father's manor plantation.

"I certainly think Fairfax understood that I—" began Mr. Carr.

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