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Alexander English

Meaning Alexander meaning

What does Alexander mean?
Definitions in simple English

Alexander

Alexander is a male given name.

Alexander

king of Macedon; conqueror of Greece and Egypt and Persia; founder of Alexandria (356-323 BC) European herb somewhat resembling celery widely naturalized in Britain coastal regions and often cultivated as a potherb

Synonyms Alexander synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Alexander?

Examples Alexander examples

How do I use Alexander in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Alexander is not younger than Vladimir.
Alexander Hamilton was a proud man.
My friend Alexander speaks Spanish.
Alexander was a great conqueror.
Alexander makes mistakes. It proves he's not a robot.
Alexander, a friend of mine, speaks Spanish.
Alexander Selkirk was marooned on a Pacific island for four years.
The telephone is among the inventions attributed to Alexander Graham Bell.
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko congratulated Alexei Dudarev upon his birthday.
Alexander died in Babylon.
Acting on advice from his astronomers, Alexander the Great decided not to attack Egypt and went to India instead.
All the hopes of the Belarusian people are set exclusively on the first President of the Republic of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, and his son Kolya.
Alexander wrote some sentences in Berber.
Now, Alexander can translate in Spanish.
How many years did Alexander rule?
Alexander ruled for thirteen years.

Movie subtitles

ALEXANDER ILYIN-ZHENEVSKY (Urss).
I am Alexander Petrovitch Moskovich Voyda.
Did you ever heard of Alexander Petrovitch Moskovich Voyda?
I'm Alexander P. Lovett.
My name is Lovett, Alexander P.
The Prince of this land, Alexander.
We must invite Prince Alexander and strike at the Germans!
We don't want Alexander!
Summon Alexander!
Let's not wait for Alexander.
Prince Alexander, son of Yaroslav!
We must invite Alexander and call Russia to arms.
Call for Alexander!
They brazenly decided to resist and invited Prince Alexander.
Sergius Alexander Claims to have been commanding general of Russian Army and cousin to Czar.
Tireless in the defense of a crumbling empire was the Grand Duke Sergius Alexander, cousin to the Czar and Commanding General of the Russian Armies.
Alexander, don't you think it unusually hot this month?
Yesterday the king of Wurttemberg, today the king of Prussia, tomorrow Alexander of Russia!
Happy Alexander! If I weren't Metternich, I'd like to the Czar this afternoon.
It's Alexander Hamilton's idea.
Alexander, sit over there.
It's common enough for people to believe that they are Alexander the Great or Napoleon. We're prepared for that. But for a man to imagine he's a chicken.
I'm looking for Mr. Alexander Peabody.
His name's Peabody. Alexander Peabody.
Who're you? Her attorney, Alexander Peabody.
For wife two, one-time opera-singing Susan Alexander Kane built Chicago's Municipal Opera House.
Conceived for Susan Alexander Kane, half-finished before she divorced him the still unfinished Xanadu.
Alexander the Great and Genghis Khan did too.
The Alexander Peabody who represents Mrs. Carleton Random.
Alexander Peabody.
Her attorney, Alexander Peabody.
Alexander.
Sixteen years after his first marriage two weeks after his first divorce Kane married Susan Alexander singer, at the Town Hall in Trenton, New Jersey.
Susan Alexander Kane.
Miss Alexander.
This is Mr. Thompson, Miss Alexander.
If I could just have a talk with you, Miss Alexander. I'd.
Susan Alexander?
I made Miss Alexander send you the note, Mrs. Kane.

News and current affairs

PRINCETON - Russian President Vladimir Putin's anointment of Alexander Medvedev to succeed him in what is supposed to be a democratic presidential election next March shows that Russia's leaders have not changed a whit.
He may lower oil prices for someone close to him, like Belarus' dictator Alexander Lukashenko, and insist on a market price for someone else, but that's basically all he can do.
That is how America's founders, such as James Madison and Alexander Hamilton, envisioned that things would work.
Alexander Menshikov, Peter the Great's minister, understood the impossibility of winning the fight against corruption.
Then there is Belarus, whose ruler, Alexander Lukashenko, clings to authoritarian rule.
Alexander Dubcek, the leader of the Czechoslovak communists and the symbol of the Prague Spring, personified hope for democratic evolution, real pluralism, and a peaceful way to a state governed by law and respectful of human rights.
Alexander Hamilton was clear on the primacy of commerce and industry.
The situation in the Kremlin appears reminiscent of the spring of 1996, when a group of KGB men, led by President Boris Yeltsin's chief bodyguard, General Alexander Korzhakov, almost seized power.
Indeed, by alienating big business and letting his wily chief of staff, Alexander Voloshin, resign, Putin has deprived himself of crucial electoral resources.
The idea of the Gulag entered our literature with Alexander Solzhenitsyn's One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.
A monument to Admiral Alexander Kolchak, who led the White effort to overthrow the Bolsheviks, has been erected in Irkutsk, and a monument to Nicholas II has been built in Moscow.
Alexander II sold Alaska; Lenin withdrew from Ukraine in exchange for peace with Germany; and Gorbachev pulled back from central Europe in an effort to end the Cold War.
From Alexander the Great to Stalin the Cruel, variants of that strategy have been used to keep nations in thrall to the will of an emperor.
When President Alexander Lukashenko departs, Belarus may fold into Russia as East Germany was absorbed by West Germany in the early 1990's.
For many, Alexander Hamilton has become a contemporary hero.
An EU-appointed mediation commission that includes former Polish President Alexander Kwasniewski and former European Parliament President Pat Cox has proposed a solution.
A gathering of the modern equivalents of Metternich, Castlereagh, Alexander I, and Talleyrand is also a dream: there are none.
Diplomatic relations between Britain and the Kremlin are at a low since Alexander Litvenenko, a critic of the Russian government, was murdered - allegedly by a Russian agent - in London in 2006.
From Alexander Pushkin's poems to Leo Tolstoy's novels, French influence pervades the commanding heights of Russian culture.
Moreover, as in Europe today, when Alexander Hamilton proposed a central banking system, the Bank of the United States, alongside consolidation of states' Revolutionary War debt into federal debt, the implementation of his sensible plan was imperfect.
Greece vehemently opposed its tiny northern neighbor - with only two million inhabitants - using the name Macedonia and symbols from the days of Alexander the Great in its flag and crest.
And now there is the hearing, currently underway in London, into the murder of Alexander Litvenenko, a dissident ex-KGB officer.
All of them were members of the congregation of St. Nicholas in Pyzhi, whose archpriest, Alexander Shargunov, is a well-known radical fundamentalist.
Meanwhile, in July 2014, the United Kingdom reinstated a legal inquiry into the November 2006 polonium poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko, a former Russian state security officer who had become a UK citizen.
As leading Russian military expert Alexander Golts argues, the problem in Russia is not a lack of central power, but of power exercised incompetently and without individual initiative.

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