Associations to the word «Princeton»
Noun
- Nj
- Woodrow
- Trenton
- Seminary
- Yale
- Rutgers
- Jersey
- Press
- Harvard
- Ivy
- Dartmouth
- Uni
- Summa
- Markus
- University
- Wiener
- Hodge
- Cornell
- Emeritus
- Cornwallis
- Professorship
- Phd
- Mercer
- Nassau
- Neumann
- Einstein
- Stanford
- Amherst
- Presbyterian
- Undergraduate
- Georgetown
- Doctorate
- Professor
- Lehigh
- Graduate
- Lacrosse
- Halfback
- Magna
- Public
- Monmouth
- Rockefeller
- Physics
- Pritchard
- Penn
- Stockton
- Mellon
- Guggenheim
- Mccormick
- Columbia
- Lecturer
- Fellowship
- Kappa
- Tiger
- Johns
- Berkeley
- Dissertation
- Oates
- Ton
- Mathematics
- Bachelor
- Economics
- Emory
- Hopkins
- Alumnus
- Ph
- Wilson
- Classmate
- Keyword
- Carnegie
- Burr
- Lafayette
- Physicist
- Hun
- Institute
- Thesis
- Divinity
- Poe
- Hess
- Dickinson
- Archibald
- Trustee
- Mcgill
- Lyman
Adjective
Wiktionary
PRINCETON, proper noun. A male given name
PRINCETON, proper noun. A town in British Columbia, Canada
PRINCETON, proper noun. A CDP in California
PRINCETON, proper noun. A CDP in Florida
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in Illinois
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in Indiana
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in Iowa
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in Kansas
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in Kentucky
PRINCETON, proper noun. A town in Maine
PRINCETON, proper noun. A town in Massachusetts
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in Minnesota
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in Missouri
PRINCETON, proper noun. A settlement in Newfoundland and Labrador
PRINCETON, proper noun. A town in New Jersey
PRINCETON, proper noun. A private university in the aforementioned New Jersey town
PRINCETON, proper noun. A town in North Carolina
PRINCETON, proper noun. A community in Ontario
PRINCETON, proper noun. A CDP in South Carolina
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in Texas
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city in West Virginia
PRINCETON, proper noun. A city and a town in Wisconsin
Dictionary definition
PRINCETON, noun. A university town in central New Jersey.
PRINCETON, noun. A university in New Jersey.
Wise words
The chief difference between words and deeds is that words
are always intended for men for their approbation, but deeds
can be done only for God.