Elk from Yellowstone National Park were introduced to this area in 1913, and are reasonably common in the area today.
Merriam-Webster | Elk | elk | Elk Grove, California | Elk Grove | Black Elk Speaks | Black Elk | Spotted Elk | Elk River | Elk Mountain | Elk Grove Village, Illinois | Clinton Hart Merriam | Molly Spotted Elk | John Campbell Merriam | Irish elk | Frank Merriam | Elk River (Maryland) | Elk Mountain, Wyoming | Alan P. Merriam | Spotted Elk's | Merriam | Henry W. Merriam | George Merriam | Florence Augusta Merriam Bailey | Elk River (West Virginia) | Elk River (Washington) | Elk Ridge Ski Area | Elk Ridge (Maryland) | Elk Point Group | Elk Mountain (Carbon County, Wyoming) |
Nandipati received a $30,000 cash prize, an engraved trophy from the E. W. Scripps Company, a $2,500 savings bond from Merriam-Webster, a $5,000 scholarship from the Sigma Phi Epsilon Educational Foundation, $2,600 in reference works from Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., and an online language course and Barnes & Noble Nook from Middlebury Interactive Languages.
Catherine Galbraith (née Catherine Merriam Atwater; January 19, 1913 – October 1, 2008) was an American author who was the wife of economist and author John Kenneth Galbraith, and the mother of four sons: diplomat and political analyst, Peter W. Galbraith, economist James K. Galbraith, attorney J. Alan Galbraith, and Douglas Galbraith who died in childhood of leukemia.
Merriam has produced paintings for the covers of books by Paula Volsky and Neal Barrett Jr. published by Bantam Books, as well as for an international literary journal, Mid-American Review.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary and Merriam-Webster dictionary, the term derives from 'do as in hairdo.
During his tenure, expansion has been evident such as the Recording Academy’s decision (2010) to add the Americana Category to its list of Grammy Awards and in 2011, Merriam-Webster to added the word, Americana, as a musical term, to its prestigious Collegiate Dictionary.
Kory Stamper is a lexicographer and editor for the Merriam-Webster family of dictionaries.
In 1843, after Noah Webster's death, George and Charles Merriam secured publishing and revision rights to the 1840 edition of the dictionary.
•
Merriam overhauled the dictionary again with the 1961 Webster's Third New International under the direction of Philip B. Gove, making changes which sparked public controversy.
The native habitat of Merriam's ground squirrel is arid chapparal environments dominated by sagebrush, and, to a lesser extent, by greasewood and shadscale.
•
However, it can only be reliably distinguished from Townsend's ground squirrel and the Piute ground squirrel by genetic testing, and, for a long time, these species were not considered to be separate.
Ned Alvin Merriam (October 26, 1884, Wisconsin – July 9, 1956, Tinley Park, Illinois) was an American athlete and coach.
Webster's name has become synonymous with "dictionary" in the United States, especially the modern Merriam-Webster dictionary that was first published in 1828 as An American Dictionary of the English Language.
In addition he has contributed definitions and other material to dictionaries and other language reference works issued by Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Longman, Macmillan, HarperCollins, Chambers Harrap, Langenscheidt, Berlitz, Scholastic Corporation, and Merriam-Webster, among others.
It was recombined as Cynodictis latidens by Scott (1898); it was recombined as Nothocyon latidens by Matthew (1899), Merriam (1906), Matthew (1907), Peterson (1907), Thorpe (1922), Hall and Martin (1930), Macdonald (1963) and Macdonald (1970); it was recombined as Cormocyon latidens by Wang and Fremd (1994); it was recombined as Phlaocyon latidens by Xiaoming Wang, Richard H. Tedford, et al. (1999).
The SM North area has a population of approximately 52,000 and includes the communities of Merriam, Mission, northern Overland Park, Roeland Park, Countryside and Eastern Shawnee.
One of the books written by Virginia Coigney is a "Do you Know" series of books titled "Who Did It?" it was edited by Eve Merriam and illustrated by Murray Tinkelman.
Merriam's main opponent in the gubernatorial election would be Upton Sinclair, author of The Jungle.