{i} family name; male first name; Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), sixteenth president of the United States (1861-65); capital city of Nebraska (USA); town in Rhode Island (USA); city in Illinois (USA); town in Ontario (Canada); another name for Lincolnshire (county in England); city in Lincolnshire (England); United States car manufacturing company founded in 1917 known for providing limousines for the U.S. President; breed of sheep with long wool
American singer and actress who led a jazz group which included Sonny Rollins and Max Roach. In later years she became an advocate for racial equality. The 16th President of the United States (1861-1865), who led the Union during the Civil War and emancipated slaves in the South (1863). He was assassinated shortly after the end of the war by John Wilkes Booth. First Lady of the United States (1861-1865) as the wife of President Abraham Lincoln. Born in the South, she was criticized during the Civil War for allegedly having Confederate sympathies. A peak, 4,357.2 m (14,286 ft) high, in the Rocky Mountains of central Colorado. It is the highest elevation of the Park Range. a type of large US car made by the Ford company. The Lincoln Continental is one of the best-known luxury cars in the US. City (pop., 2000: 225,581), capital of Nebraska, U.S. Laid out in 1859 and called Lancaster, it was renamed for Abraham Lincoln when it was chosen as the capital in 1867. The town was incorporated in 1869 and was the home of the politician William Jennings Bryan from 1887 to 1921. It is a railroad junction and commercial centre serving the surrounding agricultural region. Its institutions of higher education include the University of Nebraska, Union College, and Nebraska Wesleyan University. ancient Lindum City and administrative district (pop., 2001: 85,616), administrative and historic county of Lincolnshire, eastern England. Under the name Lindum, it served as a Roman fortress, and by AD 71 it had become a settlement for retired soldiers. It later came under Danish rule, and in the Middle Ages it was one of England's major towns. Henry II gave the city its first charter in 1154. It is a market centre for an agricultural region and also possesses some manufacturing. It has many medieval buildings, including the cathedral (begun 1075). Kirstein Lincoln Edward Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts Lincoln Abraham Lincoln Benjamin Lincoln Douglas Debates Steffens Joseph Lincoln
long-wooled mutton sheep originally from Lincolnshire capital of the state of Nebraska; located in southeastern Nebraska; site of the University of Nebraska 16th President of the United States; saved the Union during the Civil War and emancipated the slaves; was assassinated by Booth (1809-1865)