Associations to the word «Montague»
Noun
- Summers
- Semantic
- Semantics
- Cooke
- Romeo
- Mona
- Montagu
- Monty
- Grammar
- Juliet
- Browne
- Burton
- Bertie
- Greenfield
- Ripper
- Viscount
- Darrell
- Whitehall
- Denton
- Hearst
- Gillespie
- Derek
- Milford
- Manuscript
- Browning
- Esq
- Verona
- Augustus
- Henrietta
- Salisbury
- Emily
- Lindsey
- Halifax
- Nassau
- Aubrey
- Warwick
- Monte
- Syntax
- Merton
- Predicate
- Angelina
- Eater
- Baird
- Bates
- Esquire
- Bowie
- Smallpox
- Kern
- Jonas
- Logic
- Rhodes
- Brooklyn
- Sonar
- Wendell
- Baronetcy
- Hampstead
- Ivor
- Southampton
- Exchequer
- Warrington
- Weeks
- Palo
- Napier
- Perry
- Pinto
- Henchman
- Earl
- Baronet
- Forth
- Wheeler
- Mortimer
- Hadley
- Shaw
- Amos
- Calculus
- Vizier
- Evelyn
- Jacobson
- Starr
- Sussex
- Honolulu
- Eliot
- Walpole
- Barlow
- Linguist
- Vaughan
- Betty
- Waistcoat
- Cairo
- Sunderland
- Sandwich
- Witchcraft
- Squire
Verb
Wiktionary
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A surname, variant of Montagu.
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A male given name.
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A member of Romeo's family in William Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet.
MONTAGUE, proper noun. (figuratively) By analogy with the Shakespearean play, a member or citizen of the family, party, or country of the husband in a Romeo and Juliet couple.
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A city in California
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A town in Massachusetts
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A city in Michigan
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A town in New York
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A township in Ontario
MONTAGUE, proper noun. A town in Prince Edward Island
MONTAGUE, proper noun. An unincorporated CDP in Texas
MONTAGUE GRAMMAR, noun. An approach to natural language semantics based on formal logic.
Wise words
Man is a creature who lives not upon bread alone, but
principally by catch words.