Associations to the word «Kent»
Noun
- Bromley
- Chatham
- Sussex
- Canterbury
- Superman
- Surrey
- Rockwell
- Dover
- Wessex
- Middlesex
- Essex
- Lois
- Anglia
- Romney
- Yeomanry
- Rochester
- Akron
- Nottinghamshire
- Baronetage
- Clark
- Buckinghamshire
- Gloucestershire
- Baronetcy
- Kal
- Hertfordshire
- Cooke
- Duchess
- Wicket
- Warwickshire
- Downs
- Stacey
- Lear
- Leicestershire
- Worcestershire
- Spitfire
- Wells
- Pendleton
- Northamptonshire
- Batsman
- Osborne
- Derbyshire
- Glamorgan
- Cricketer
- Oxfordshire
- Thames
- Cricket
- Bedfordshire
- Delaware
- Saxon
- Sandwich
- Dockyard
- Dorset
- Greenwich
- Berkshire
- Wiltshire
- Hampshire
- Bowler
- Lex
- Gloucester
- Suffolk
- Nilsson
- Wight
- Cambridgeshire
- Croydon
- Odo
- Bede
- Estuary
- Milford
- County
- Woodstock
- Peerage
- Grange
- Somerset
- Mote
- Katharine
- Conrad
- Lydia
- Cordelia
- Australian
- Guardsman
- England
- Earl
- Cornwall
- Inning
- Northumberland
- Guildford
- Windmill
- Dorchester
- Burgh
- Hove
- Stagecoach
- Lancashire
- Bowling
- Cheltenham
- Yorkshire
- Robbins
Verb
Wiktionary
KENT, proper noun. A maritime county in the southeast of England bordered by East Sussex, Surrey, Greater London, the North Sea and the English Channel.
KENT, proper noun. A town in Connecticut
KENT, proper noun. A CDP in Iowa
KENT, proper noun. A city in Minnesota
KENT, proper noun. A town in New York
KENT, proper noun. A city in Ohio
KENT, proper noun. A city in Washington, USA
KENT, proper noun. A surname derived from the place name.
KENT, proper noun. A male given name transferred from the surname; of mostly American usage, but never popular.
KENT, verb. Simple past tense and past participle of ken
KENT BUGLE, noun. (musical instrument) A curved bugle with six stops.
Dictionary definition
KENT, noun. A county in southeastern England on the English Channel; formerly an Anglo-Saxon kingdom, it was the first to be colonized by the Romans.
KENT, noun. United States painter noted for his woodcuts (1882-1971).
Wise words
We should have a great fewer disputes in the world if words
were taken for what they are, the signs of our ideas only,
and not for things themselves.