Definitions
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a small cape in southwestern Spain
Etymologies
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Examples
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The Englishman's victory at Cape Trafalgar established Britannia as ruler of the waves.
Ahoy, Billionaires: 2008
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The Englishman's victory at Cape Trafalgar established Britannia as ruler of the waves.
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The only money spent on it had gone on a bit of cosmetic landscaping that may have cost £30,000 the stone plinth came all the way from Cape Trafalgar.
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We have just been to look at Cape Trafalgar, shining white over the finest blue sea.
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From her resting place on the ocean floor, the nearest point of land is Cape Trafalgar.
Castles of Steel Massie, Robert K., 1929- 2003
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It was before the battle off Cape Trafalgar that Nelson hoisted his famous signal,
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It was before the battle off Cape Trafalgar that Nelson hoisted his famous signal, “England expects every man will do his duty.”
Autobiography 2003
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It was before the battle off Cape Trafalgar that Nelson hoisted his famous signal, “England expects every man will do his duty.”
Autobiography 2003
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Not far off Cape Trafalgar, Spain, which is between Cadiz and the Strait of Gibraltar, Villeneuve met a British fleet of twenty-seven ships under Admiral Horatio Nelson.
The Pawprints of History STANLEY COREN 2002
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Not far off Cape Trafalgar, Spain, which is between Cadiz and the Strait of Gibraltar, Villeneuve met a British fleet of twenty-seven ships under Admiral Horatio Nelson.
The Pawprints of History STANLEY COREN 2002
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