Associations to the word «Churchill»
Noun
- Winston
- Marlborough
- Downs
- Livingstone
- Gaulle
- Stalin
- Roosevelt
- Randolph
- Admiralty
- Clive
- Spencer
- Bromley
- Jennie
- Chamberlain
- Whaling
- Prime
- Casablanca
- Ivor
- Balfour
- Exchequer
- Eisenhower
- Corvette
- Breeder
- Manitoba
- Labrador
- Eden
- Racetrack
- Potsdam
- Neville
- Hitler
- Thatcher
- Winnipeg
- Truman
- Louisville
- Downing
- Kitchener
- Handicap
- Clement
- Molotov
- Saxon
- Brothers
- Mussolini
- Henrietta
- Duchess
- Tito
- Oxfordshire
- Thoroughbred
- Conservative
- Minister
- Derby
- Allies
- Cabinet
- Chiang
- Liv
- Crocodile
- Blitz
- Tehran
- Marguerite
- Fallon
- Portage
- Brooke
- Spears
- Livingston
- Marquess
- Lloyd
- Kentucky
- Franklin
- Moran
- Fulton
- Munition
- Cairo
- Mk
- Falls
- Viscount
- Furlong
- Gram
- Nazi
- Fairfax
- Statesman
- Memorandum
- Newfoundland
- Macmillan
- Pamela
- Helene
- Britain
- Boer
- Goa
- Halifax
- Fellowship
- Commando
- Rockwell
- Filly
Verb
Wiktionary
CHURCHILL, proper noun. Any of several English placenames from church and hill.
CHURCHILL, proper noun. A habitational surname from any of these places.
CHURCHILL, proper noun. Winston Churchill, English statesman, Prime Minister and author.
CHURCHILL, proper noun. A cocktail mage by Joe Gilmore
CHURCHILL, proper noun. One of four villages in England
CHURCHILL, proper noun. A town in Manitoba on the coast of Hudson Bay
CHURCHILL, proper noun. A CDP in Ohio
CHURCHILL, proper noun. A borough in Pennsylvania
CHURCHILL, proper noun. A town in Victoria, Australia
Dictionary definition
CHURCHILL, noun. English general considered one of the greatest generals in history (1650-1722).
CHURCHILL, noun. British statesman and leader during World War II; received Nobel prize for literature in 1953 (1874-1965).
CHURCHILL, noun. A Canadian town in northern Manitoba on Hudson Bay; important port for shipping grain.
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.