Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at snowden.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Snowden.
Examples
-
Mrs. Snowden is the wife of the Right Honourable Philip Snowden, M.P., who was Chancellor of the Exchequer in the first Labour Government.
-
To my younger brother he left his estate on James river, called Snowden, after the supposed birth-place of the family: to myself, the lands on which I was born and live.
Memoir Correspondence And Miscellanies Jefferson, Thomas 1829
-
To my younger brother he left his estate on James river, called Snowden, after the supposed birth-place of the family: to myself, the lands on which I was born and live.
Memoir, Correspondence, And Miscellanies, From The Papers Of Thomas Jefferson, Volume 1 Thomas Jefferson 1784
-
The title "Snowden," from their 2005 release Some Cities, was written in a cottage near Loch Ness, but no monsters here.
Phil Ramone and Danielle Evin: Dog Ears Music: Volume Fifty-One 2009
-
Snowden Mining Industry Consultants Inc. ( "Snowden") estimate the Updated Resource Estimate to contain 632 million ounces of silver and 2.9 billion pounds of lead in the Measured and Indicated categories plus an additional 119 million ounces of silver and 580 million pounds of lead in the Inferred category (see table below).
-
Snowden Mining Industry Consultants Inc. ( "Snowden") estimate the Updated Resource Estimate to contain 632 million ounces of silver and 2.9 billion pounds of lead in the Measured and Indicated categories plus an additional 119 million ounces of silver and 580 million pounds of lead in the Inferred category (see table below).
-
This data was incorporated in the Preliminary Economic Assessment report published by Snowden Mining Industry Consultants ( "Snowden") in October 2008, which estimated annual silver production of 15 million ounces over a 6.6 year mine life.
-
"There is no Inn in Snowden which is not awful dear,
Set in Silver 1901
-
Their allegations that they were the victims of an "epic swindle" and "grand conspiracy" to sell the club below its market price were "wild and scurrilous" with no evidence to support them, Snowden said.
Battle for Liverpool goes into extra-time after day in court Owen Gibson 2010
-
Royal Bank of ScotlandIn the high court the bank's QC, Richard Snowden, made it clear that it wanted its loan from Hicks and Gillett repaid by tomorrow's deadline and took great offence in the suggestion, made by the owner's QC, that the two parties were "locked" into an agreement which meant no money had to be repaid by 1 November.
Liverpool sale: What next for this saga's principal factions? Sachin Nakrani 2010
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.