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Wald

American  
[wawld] / wɔld /

noun

  1. George, 1906–97, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1967.

  2. Lillian, 1867–1940, U.S. social worker.


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.

“It’s too early to call Putin, but they still have his number on speed-dial,” says Ellen Wald, president of energy market watcher Transversal Consulting.

From Barron's

“It’s too early to call Putin, but they still have his number on speed-dial,” says Ellen Wald, president of energy market watcher Transversal Consulting.

From Barron's

This account recalls a number of telling details of that era, when Jane Addams taught citizenship at Chicago’s Hull House, Lillian Wald dispatched visiting nurses from New York’s Henry Street Settlement and Simkhovitch, in 1902, founded and led New York’s Greenwich House.

From The Wall Street Journal

By 1930, Wald noted the large number of “empties” on the Lower East Side; immigrants had moved up and out to Brooklyn.

From The Wall Street Journal

The reason investors as well as economists should take note of the ITB’s breakout is that home builders are historically seen as “an early cycle leader,” Oppenheimer technical analyst Ari Wald wrote in a note to clients this week.

From MarketWatch