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Grahamfamily name attested from early 12c., an Anglo-French form of the place name Grantham (Lincolnshire). In reference to crackers, bread, etc., made from unsifted whole-wheat flour, 1834, American Englis [..]
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GrahamBasic measure of metric weight: 28.35 grams = 1 ounce and 1000 grams = a kilogram = 2.2 U.S. pounds.
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Graham(n) United States evangelical preacher famous as a mass evangelist (born in 1918)(n) United States dancer and choreographer whose work was noted for its austerity and technical rigor (1893-1991)(n) fl [..]
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GrahamA charlatan who gave indecent and blasphemous addresses in the “Great Apollo Room,” Adelphi. He sometimes made mesmerism a medium of pandering to the prurient taste of his audience.
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GrahamGraham was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and died in Princeton, New Jersey. He is known mainly for his work in the theory of international trade, and ...
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GrahamMade from either hard, soft or a blend of both wheat classes. All are produced by either grinding the whole wheat kernel or recombining the white flour, germ and bran to make a whole wheat flour. Coar [..]
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GrahamA widely collected landscape artist, K.M. (Kathleen Margaret) Graham worked in an abstract expressionist style. Attracted to the light and colours of the North, Graham made many painting trips to the [..]
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Graham
(uncountable) Flour made by grinding wheat berries including the bran.
(countable) A graham cracker.
* '''2001''', ''Vegetarian Times'' (number 289, page 59)
*: These classic, wholesome grahams [..]
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GrahamFrom a Scottish surname, originally derived from the English place name Grantham, which probably meant "gravelly homestead" in Old English. The surname was first taken to Scotland in [..]
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