Wilson
Americannoun
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Sir Angus (Frank Johnstone) 1913–91, English writer.
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August, 1945-2005, U.S. playwright.
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Charles Thomson Rees 1869–1959, Scottish physicist: Nobel Prize 1927.
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Edith Bolling (Galt), 1872–1961, U.S. First Lady 1915–21 (second wife of Woodrow Wilson).
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Edmund, 1895–1972, U.S. literary and social critic.
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Ellen Louise Axson, 1860–1914, U.S. First Lady 1913–14 (first wife of Woodrow Wilson).
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Harriet, 1825–1900, U.S. novelist: first African American woman to publish a novel.
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Henry Jeremiah Jones Colbath or Colbaith, 1812–75, U.S. politician: vice president of the United States. 1873–75.
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James, 1742–98, U.S. jurist, born in Scotland: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1789–98.
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Sir (James) Harold, 1916–95, British statesman: prime minister 1964–70, 1974–76.
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John Christopher North, 1785–1854, Scottish poet, journalist, and critic.
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Lanford 1937–2011, U.S. playwright.
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Robert W(oodrow), born 1936, U.S. radio astronomer: Nobel Prize in physics 1978.
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Sloan, 1920–2003, U.S. journalist and novelist.
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(Thomas) Woodrow, 1856–1924, 28th president of the U.S. 1913–21: Nobel Peace Prize 1919.
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Mount Wilson, a mountain in southwestern California, near Pasadena: observatory. 5,710 feet (1,740 meters).
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a city in eastern North Carolina.
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a male given name.
noun
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Alexander. 1766–1813, Scottish ornithologist in the US
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Sir Angus ( Frank Johnstone ). 1913–91, British writer, whose works include the collection of short stories The Wrong Set (1949) and the novels Anglo-Saxon Attitudes (1956) and No Laughing Matter (1967)
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Charles Thomson Rees. 1869–1959, Scottish physicist, who invented the cloud chamber: shared the Nobel prize for physics 1927
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Edmund. 1895–1972, US critic, noted esp for Axel's Castle (1931), a study of the symbolist movement
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( James ) Harold, Baron Wilson of Rievaulx. 1916–95, British Labour statesman; prime minister (1964–70; 1974–76)
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Jacqueline . born 1945, British writer for older girls; her best-selling books include The Story of Tracey Beaker (1991), The Illustrated Mum (1998), and Girls in Tears (2002).
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Richard. 1714–82, Welsh landscape painter
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( Thomas ) Woodrow (ˈwʊdrəʊ). 1856–1924, US Democratic statesman; 28th president of the US (1913–21). He led the US into World War I in 1917 and proposed the Fourteen Points (1918) as a basis for peace. Although he secured the formation of the League of Nations, the US Senate refused to support it: Nobel peace prize 1919
Other Word Forms
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.
At first, though, Jane Street was so guarded it didn’t want to run any of its proprietary software on Antithesis’s AI agents, said Antithesis CEO Will Wilson.
From The Wall Street Journal • Jun. 20, 2026
The second application included Wilson, now 32, and his young daughter.
From Los Angeles Times • Jun. 17, 2026
Wilson, who was the biographer for A. Philip Randolph, the iconic civil rights and labor leader, said the Ohio FBI raids “were an act of desperation that will backfire and only inspire greater voter turnout.”
From Salon • Jun. 16, 2026
In 1968, Roy Jenkins and Tony Crosland urged Wilson to promote him, and he became an under-secretary of state at the Ministry of Labour, under the forthright Barbara Castle.
From BBC • Jun. 14, 2026
“She also called out the August Wilson Acting Ensemble, which was named after a prominent social justice playwright, who is black, I might add.”
From "Watch Us Rise" by Renée Watson and Ellen Hagan
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.