Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Both the Conococheague Creek in Fairview and the Monocacy River near Frederick were over their banks.
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Both the Conococheague Creek in Fairview and the Monocacy River near Frederick were over their banks.
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A primary goal of the expedition was the destruction of the Cumberland Valley Railroad bridge over Conococheague Creek, located about five miles outside Chambersburg.
Cavalryman of the Lost Cause Jeffry D. Wert 2008
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A primary goal of the expedition was the destruction of the Cumberland Valley Railroad bridge over Conococheague Creek, located about five miles outside Chambersburg.
Cavalryman of the Lost Cause Jeffry D. Wert 2008
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But already by 1760, his oldest son John b. 1736, at age twenty-four, had surveyed the mouth of Muddy Creek, 160 miles west of the Conococheague and some 60 miles south of Fort Pitt.
First Man James R. Hansen 2005
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Adam Abraham Armstrong worked his land in the Conococheague, in what became Cumberland County, until his death in Franklin, Pennsylvania, on May 20, 1779, when he was sixty-three or sixty-four.
First Man James R. Hansen 2005
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Adam Abraham Armstrong worked his land in the Conococheague, in what became Cumberland County, until his death in Franklin, Pennsylvania, on May 20, 1779, when he was sixty-three or sixty-four.
First Man James R. Hansen 2005
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But already by 1760, his oldest son John b. 1736, at age twenty-four, had surveyed the mouth of Muddy Creek, 160 miles west of the Conococheague and some 60 miles south of Fort Pitt.
First Man James R. Hansen 2005
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But already by 1760, his oldest son John b. 1736, at age twenty-four, had surveyed the mouth of Muddy Creek, 160 miles west of the Conococheague and some 60 miles south of Fort Pitt.
First Man James R. Hansen 2005
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Adam Abraham Armstrong worked his land in the Conococheague, in what became Cumberland County, until his death in Franklin, Pennsylvania, on May 20, 1779, when he was sixty-three or sixty-four.
First Man James R. Hansen 2005
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