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Raymond

[rey-muhnd]

noun

  1. Henry Jarvis 1820–69, U.S. publicist: founder of The New York Times.

  2. a male given name: from Germanic words meaning “counsel” and “protection.”



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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.

“Despite the massive wealth of the Ellison family backing Paramount, fair questions have surfaced in terms of how Paramount would finance the reportedly significant majority-cash bid for WBD, given that $350 billion-plus in net worth does not mean the Ellisons have $50 billion or $60 billion in cash just lying around,” media analyst Ric Prentiss of Raymond James & Associates wrote in a note to clients.

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The black Simmons, who died in his early 80s in 2020, sadly never received the attention in life that his friend, neighbor and fellow artist Raymond Coins did despite working in similar styles and materials.

In the early ’60s the company commissioned designer Raymond Loewy to draw up a competitor to the Ford Thunderbird.

“The big question is whether spending will continue at the same pace when the prices of products across most categories go up, which is in the process of being sorted out right now,” said Rick Patel, a managing director of equity research at Raymond James.

Chris, you aren’t a stockpicker, but are there any stocks that your Raymond James colleagues recommend that you would care to highlight?

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rayletChandler, Raymond