boston

listen to the pronunciation of boston
الإنجليزية - التركية
boston
boston tea party
Boston Çay Partisi
التركية - التركية
çok ağır bir Amerikan valsi
üç zamanlı ağır vals
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
The capital and largest city in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, located in the northeastern United States

And Cabots talk only to God.

A town in Lincolnshire, England
{n} the chief town in Massachusetts
a city in Massachusetts on the Atlantic coast, the most important city in New England, and one of the oldest cities in the US. Its famous colleges and universities include Harvard and MIT. Seaport city (pop., 2000: 589,141), capital of Massachusetts, U.S. Located on Massachusetts Bay at the mouths of the Charles and Mystic rivers, it is the state's largest city. Settled by Gov. John Winthrop in 1630, it was made the capital of Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1632. As a leader in the opposition to British trade restrictions on its American colonies, Boston was a locus of events leading to the American Revolution: it was the scene of the Boston Massacre (1770) and Boston Tea Party (1773). It was the centre for the antislavery movement (1830-65). As the Industrial Revolution took hold in the U.S., Boston grew as an important manufacturing and textile centre. Today financial and high-technology industries are basic to its economy. Numerous institutions of higher education are located there, including Boston University. See also Cambridge. Boston Globe The Boston Massacre Boston Police Strike Boston Strangler Boston Tea Party Boston terrier
{i} seaport and capital city of Massachusetts (USA)
state capital and largest city of Massachusetts; a major center for banking and financial services
A game at cards, played by four persons, with two packs of fifty-two cards each; said to be so called from Boston, Massachusetts, and to have been invented by officers of the French army in America during the Revolutionary war
Boston baked beans
A mixture of navy beans or pinto beans and molasses baked slowly
Boston brahmin
A person of high social standing who is a member of a wealthy, influential family with a lengthy history of residence in or near the city of Boston, USA

Edward C. Johnson III is the very model of a Boston Brahmin billionaire—a pillar of Yankee discretion and probity.

Boston cream pie
A round cake that is split, filled with custard or cream, and frosted with chocolate, the official dessert of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Boston Celtics
American basketball team from Massachusetts (member of the National Basketball Association)
Boston College
{i} BC, large private college located in Chestnut Hill (Massachusetts, USA)
Boston Globe
major daily newspaper printed in Massachusetts (USA)
Boston Globe
a US newspaper sold especially in New England
Boston Massacre
event which occurred on the 5th of March 1770 in which young American Colonists taunted British troops and the British troops retaliated by shooting and killing 5 people (one of the events that lead to the American Revolution)
Boston Massacre
one of the events that started the American Revolutionary War. In 1770 a group of Boston citizens, who were angry because the British army was in their town, threatened a British soldier. Other soldiers fired their guns into the crowd, killing five people. Skirmish on March 5, 1770, between British troops and a crowd in Boston. After provocation by the colonists, British soldiers fired on the mob and killed five men, including Crispus Attucks. The incident was widely publicized by Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, and others as a battle for American liberty, and it contributed to the unpopularity of the British in the years before the American Revolution
Boston Police Strike
Strike in 1919 by most of Boston's police force to protest the police commissioner's decision to deny them the right to unionize. The mayor called in the city militia to restore order and break the strike; Gov. Calvin Coolidge later sent in the state militia, which gave him a reputation as a strong supporter of law and order and led to his nomination as vice president on the 1920 Republican ticket
Boston Pops
{i} Boston Pops Orchestra, symphony orchestra founded in 1885 as a smaller section of the Boston Symphony Orchestra ensemble
Boston Pops
an orchestra (=large group of musicians) from Boston, known for its performances and records of well-known pieces of classical music and famous tunes from films and musicals
Boston Pops Orchestra
{i} Boston Pops, symphony orchestra founded in 1885 as a smaller section of the Boston Symphony Orchestra ensemble
Boston Strangler
the name newspapers used to describe Albert DeSalvo (1931-73), a man who raped and strangled 13 women aged between 19 and 85 in Boston, US, between June 1962 and January 1964. American serial killer who murdered at least 11 and as many as 13 women in the Boston area between 1962 and 1964. The killer's first victim, a 55-year-old woman, was sexually assaulted and strangled in her apartment on June 14, 1962. During the following months, several other elderly women were murdered in similar circumstances, though subsequent victims included young women. In 1965 Albert DeSalvo, an inmate at a state mental hospital, confessed to the murders. Although never charged with the killings because no physical evidence tied him to the murder scenes, he was convicted on separate counts of sexual assault and sentenced to life imprisonment. DeSalvo's guilt remains controversial, in part because his confessions demonstrated ignorance of many aspects of the crimes. DNA tests in 2001 confirmed that it was all but impossible that DeSalvo was guilty of the last of the murders, though it was one of the crimes to which he had confessed
Boston Symphony Orchestra
{i} renowned symphony orchestra of Boston (Massachusetts, USA) founded in 1881
Boston Symphony Orchestra
a US orchestra (=a large group of musicians) based in Boston, Massachusetts
Boston Tea Party
{i} event which occurred on the 16th of December 1773 in which American Colonists stormed British ships and threw chests of tea into Boston Harbor in protest of British taxation policies (U.S. History)
Boston Tea Party
a protest in Boston in 1773 against the British tax on tea, when tea was thrown from British ships into the water. This is often considered to be the event that started the American Revolutionary War. Incident on Dec. 16, 1773, in which American patriots dressed as Indians threw 342 chests of tea from three British ships into Boston Harbour. Their leader was Samuel Adams. The action was taken to prevent the payment of a British-imposed tax on tea and to protest the British monopoly of the colonial tea trade authorized by the Tea Act. In retaliation, Parliament passed the punitive Intolerable Acts, which further united the colonies in their opposition to the British
Boston University
BU, large private university located in Boston (Massachusetts, USA)
Boston cream pie
A round cake with a custard or cream filling, often topped with a chocolate glaze
Boston ivy
A high-climbing woody vine (Parthenocissus tricuspidata) native to eastern Asia and having three-lobed deciduous leaves. It frequently covers the outer walls of buildings and has attractive fall coloration. Also called Japanese ivy
Boston lettuce
A type of cultivated lettuce forming a rounded head and having soft-textured, yellow-green inner leaves
Boston marriage
A long-term, intimate, sometimes discreetly sexual relationship between two women
Boston rocker
A rocking chair having a high back with spindles, a decorative panel at the top, and a seat and arms that curve downward in front
Boston terrier
Any of a breed of small dogs originating in New England as a cross between a bull terrier and a bulldog and having a smooth, brindled or black coat with white markings. Also called Boston bull. Breed of dog developed in the late 19th century in Boston. Bred from the English bulldog and a white English terrier, the Boston terrier is one of the few breeds to have originated in the U.S. It has a terrier-like build, dark eyes, a short muzzle, and a short, fine coat of black or brindle, with white on the face, chest, neck, and legs. It stands 14-17 in. (36-43 cm) high and ranges in weight from 15 to 25 lbs (7-11 kg). The breed is characteristically gentle and affectionate
boston baked beans
dried navy beans baked slowly with molasses and salt pork
boston bull
small pug-faced American terrier breed having a smooth brindle or black coat with white markings
boston cream pie
layer cake filled with custard
boston fern
a sword fern with arching or drooping pinnate fronds; a popular houseplant
boston harbor
the seaport at Boston
boston ivy
Asiatic vine with three-lobed leaves and purple berries
boston lettuce
lettuce with relatively soft leaves
boston rocker
a rocking chair that has a high spindle back and a decorative top panel
boston tea party
demonstration (1773) by citizens of Boston who (disguised as Indians) raided three British ships in Boston harbor and dumped hundreds of chests of tea into the harbor; organized as a protest against taxes on tea
Bostonian
Related to, characteristic of, or residing in Boston

Bostonian fashions are reserved, even dull, when compared to California style.

Bostonian
A person who was born in or who lives in Boston, Massachusetts

Bostonians eagerly await the arrival of spring after a long, cold, snowy winter.

bostonian
{n} an inhabitant of Boston
Bostonian
{i} native or resident of Boston (seaport and capital city of Massachusetts, USA)
Bostonian
{s} of or from Boston, pertaining to Boston (seaport and capital city of Massachusetts, USA)
Bostonian
Related to, characteristic of or residing in Boston
The Boston Globe
Daily newspaper published in Boston, one of the more influential newspapers in the U.S. Founded in 1872, it was purchased in 1877 by Charles H. Taylor. Under his leadership, it began publishing morning and evening editions, increased local and regional coverage, and introduced big headlines, especially on sensational stories. In the 20th century, still headed by the Taylor family, the paper began providing more national and international news while maintaining a generally liberal editorial stance. The New York Times Co. acquired the Globe in 1993
bostonian
a resident of Boston
التركية - الإنجليزية
the hub
Boston
boston
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