Associations to the word «Oxford»
Noun
- Blackwell
- Magdalen
- Osprey
- Eton
- Merton
- Dictionary
- Oxfordshire
- Press
- Christi
- Pembroke
- Exeter
- Somerville
- Ruskin
- Basil
- Cambridge
- Radcliffe
- Uni
- Harrow
- University
- Worcester
- Rhodes
- Professorship
- Kuala
- Tutor
- Winchester
- Isis
- Rowing
- Rower
- Corpus
- College
- Lecturer
- Byzantium
- Classics
- Antony
- Commoner
- Fellow
- Jurisprudence
- Ba
- Scholarship
- Berg
- Marlborough
- Playhouse
- Trinity
- Thames
- Handbook
- Henley
- Doctorate
- Piccadilly
- Wolverhampton
- Woodstock
- Buckinghamshire
- Paperback
- Swindon
- Christ
- Harley
- Divinity
- Cheltenham
- Zoology
- Delhi
- Westminster
- Undergraduate
- Hereford
- Chancellor
- Archdeacon
- Emory
- Warden
- Shrewsbury
- Melbourne
- Churchman
- Worcestershire
- Grammar
- Mansfield
- Gloucester
- Curate
- Keynes
- Warwick
- Milford
- York
- Gloucestershire
- Mortimer
- Opus
- Archaeology
- Infirmary
- Berkshire
- Karachi
- Edmund
- Ox
- Biography
Wiktionary
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in England famous for its university.
OXFORD, proper noun. Oxford University
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in Alabama
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in Arkansas
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in Connecticut
OXFORD, proper noun. An unincorporated community in Florida
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in Georgia, USA
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in Idaho
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in Indiana
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in Iowa
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in Kansas
OXFORD, proper noun. An unincorporated community in Kentucky
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in Maine
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in Maryland
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in Massachusetts
OXFORD, proper noun. A village in Michigan
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in Mississippi
OXFORD, proper noun. A village in Nebraska
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in New York
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in New Zealand
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in North Carolina
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in Nova Scotia
OXFORD, proper noun. A city in Ohio
OXFORD, proper noun. A borough in Pennsylvania
OXFORD, proper noun. An unincorporated community in West Virginia
OXFORD, proper noun. A town in Wisconsin
OXFORD, noun. A variety of shoe, typically made of heavy leather.
OXFORD, noun. (by ellipsis) An Oxford Dictionary.
OXFORD, noun. Alternative letter-case form of Oxford (cloth)
OXFORD, noun. A shoe of a particular sort.
OXFORD BLUE, noun. A dark blue colour.
OXFORD BLUE, adjective. Of an Oxford blue colour.
OXFORD COMMA, noun. A serial comma.
OXFORD COMMAS, noun. Plural of Oxford comma
OXFORD MOVEMENT, noun. A group of clerical Oxford dons that tried to link the Anglican Church more closely to its Roman Catholic roots
OXFORD PILLOWCASE, noun. A pillowcase with a valance around the edges.
OXFORD PILLOWCASES, noun. Plural of Oxford pillowcase
OXFORD QUOTATION, noun. A system of quotation, preferred in British academic publishers, wherein a) single quotation marks are used for quotations, and double quotation marks used for quotations within quotations; and b) terminal punctuation marks are enclosed within a quotation if the sense of the punctuation is part of the original material being quoted, or if it suits the sense of the quoting sentence (as determined by the publisher).
OXFORD SHOE, noun. A style of rather simple leather shoe
OXFORD SHOES, noun. Plural of Oxford shoe
OXFORD SPELLING, noun. English spelling as practiced by Oxford publications, this being the usual British spelling but with the letter z used in the suffixes -ize and -ization.
OXFORD SPELLINGS, noun. Plural of Oxford spelling
OXFORD TIE, noun. A kind of shoe, laced on the instep, and usually covering the foot nearly to the ankle.
Dictionary definition
OXFORD, noun. A city in southern England to the northwest of London; site of Oxford University.
OXFORD, noun. A university town in northern Mississippi; home of William Faulkner.
OXFORD, noun. A university in England.
OXFORD, noun. A low shoe laced over the instep.
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.