Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun see
Saint Bernard
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a Swiss alpine breed of large powerful dog with a thick coat of hair used as a rescue dog
Etymologies
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Examples
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The name St. Bernard comes from the monastery and hospice in Switzerland with which these dogs are historically associated.
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Someone call the St. Bernard patrol – I’m out of Grey Goose!
Archive 2008-12-01 CC 2008
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Someone call the St. Bernard patrol – I’m out of Grey Goose!
Dear [insert deity of choice]: LuLu 2008
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This parish, St. Bernard, which is to the east and southeast of the city of New Orleans.
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Major; what country he came from; why he was called a St. Bernard, and if the Major had ever owned any other dogs.
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One is the valley to which we are now bending our steps, which nestles not far from the foot of the great mountain men call the St. Bernard; the other is at the hospice upon the Great St. Bernard itself, where is a colony of devout and kindly monks, who give their succour to travellers of every nationality and creed, and where a safe shelter may always be found.
Tom Tufton's Travels Evelyn Everett-Green 1894
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The passage of the St. Bernard was a triumph of organisation, foresight, and good management; as a military exploit it involved none of the danger, none of the suffering, none of the hazard, which gave such interest to the campaign of Massena and Suvaroff.
A History of Modern Europe, 1792-1878 Charles Alan Fyffe 1868
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He said the tonnage increase coincided with the opening of a waste transfer station in St. Bernard, which is operated by SDT.
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DeWine and Bortz believe the plan will appeal to struggling "first suburbs" - communities such as St. Bernard and Elmwood Place - that have found it difficult to maintain their once-ample tax bases and the city services they paid for.
Archive 2006-11-01 Nathaniel Livingston 2006
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DeWine and Bortz believe the plan will appeal to struggling "first suburbs" - communities such as St. Bernard and Elmwood Place - that have found it difficult to maintain their once-ample tax bases and the city services they paid for.
Metro Wants 25 Cent Hike Nathaniel Livingston 2006
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