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Oppenheim

American  
[op-uhn-hahym] / ˈɒp ənˌhaɪm /

noun

  1. E(dward) Phillips, 1866–1946, English novelist.


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.

Smart TV systems “command much higher ad rates than mobile video,” Casey Oppenheim, co-founder and CEO of the digital-privacy company Disconnect, wrote to me.

From Slate • May 3, 2026

Oppenheim also previously offered up his suggestions as to why the home has struggled to find a buyer, despite its impressive design and Hollywood pedigree.

From MarketWatch • Feb. 5, 2026

Mr. Oppenheim calls his movie “journalism,” but the term is correct only if he means a stringing-together of narrative conceits to meet the journalist’s emotional needs.

From The Wall Street Journal • Jan. 2, 2026

Lance Oppenheim, director of “Ren Faire,” a juicy soap opera about a battle for control of the Texas Renaissance Festival, was grateful HBO doesn’t impose a mandate for how its movies look and feel.

From Los Angeles Times • Jun. 4, 2025

There is not a finer Country than that between Worms and Oppenheim, a little Town upon an Eminence, on the left Side of the Rhine, to which we pass over a flying Bridge.

From The Memoirs of Charles-Lewis, Baron de Pollnitz, Volume I Being the Observations He Made in His Late Travels from Prussia thro' Germany, Italy, France, Flanders, Holland, England, &C. in Letters to His Friend. Discovering Not Only the Present State of the Chief Cities and Towns; but the Characters of the Principal Persons at the Several Courts. by P?llnitz, Karl Ludwig von

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