Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for Locker-Lampson. Search instead for locker+lampson.

Locker-Lampson

American  
[lok-er-lam-suhn] / ˈlɒk ərˈlæm sən /

noun

  1. Frederick Frederick Locker, 1821–95, English poet.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

While researching his book, Saving Einstein: How Norfolk Hid a Genius - The Double Life of Oliver Locker-Lampson, Mr McLaren found out that Einstein was given access to many luxuries.

From BBC • Nov. 24, 2021

He was the guest of the MP Cdr Oliver Locker-Lampson.

From BBC • Nov. 24, 2021

Captain Cunningham-Reid warmly remarked that Commander Locker-Lampson reminded him of "a cuckoo which makes a nuisance of itself in other people's nests."

From Time Magazine Archive

Medals for weight-putting and other feats of strength were won by Student Locker-Lampson at Eton and Cambridge; in 1898 he won the Prince Consort's Prize for German; in 1900 edited the Cambridge undergraduate Granta.

From Time Magazine Archive

Butcher, Worthington Evans, Helmsley, Archer-Shee, Locker-Lampson, Kinloch-Cooke—what was it Grandolph, à propos of Sclater-Booth, said of men who "had double-barrelled names"?—blazed away.

From Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 146, April 29, 1914 by Various