Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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The Gaylords are the most established old-money clan in the state, giving Bennett a lifetime leg up for his every entrepreneurial aspiration.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords are the most established old-money clan in the state, giving Bennett a lifetime leg up for his every entrepreneurial aspiration.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords are the most established old-money clan in the state, giving Bennett a lifetime leg up for his every entrepreneurial aspiration.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords are the most established old-money clan in the state, giving Bennett a lifetime leg up for his every entrepreneurial aspiration.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords are as revered in Oklahoma as the Kennedys in Massachusetts.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords also once owned a minority share of the Texas Rangers—later sold, as we saw, at a sweet discount to George W. Bush.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords also once owned a minority share of the Texas Rangers—later sold, as we saw, at a sweet discount to George W. Bush.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords are as revered in Oklahoma as the Kennedys in Massachusetts.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords are as revered in Oklahoma as the Kennedys in Massachusetts.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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The Gaylords also once owned a minority share of the Texas Rangers—later sold, as we saw, at a sweet discount to George W. Bush.
Bad Sports Dave Zirin 2010
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On the day that I visited, some two hundred workers in the main building were opening pallet-size shipping containers, called Gaylords, and sorting their contents into wheeled bins.
What Happens to All the Stuff We Return? Condé Nast 2023
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