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Cambridge English

Meaning Cambridge meaning

What does Cambridge mean?

Cambridge

(= Cambridge University) a university in England a city in Massachusetts just to the north of Boston; site of Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology a city in eastern England on the River Cam; site of Cambridge University

Synonyms Cambridge synonyms

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Cambridge English » English

Cambridge University

Examples Cambridge examples

How do I use Cambridge in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Then he began working at Cambridge and developing many more ideas about the nature of the universe.
He was a professor at Cambridge University.
He graduated from Cambridge with honors.
She graduated in German at Cambridge.
Peterhouse is the oldest of the 33 colleges of Cambridge.
Kate Middleton is now the duchess of Cambridge.
In those days, or at any rate in Cambridge, laboratory life was rather informal.
Cambridge is the most famous university in the world.

Movie subtitles

Well, I was at Cambridge.
Only about eight years. Harvard, Hopkins, Cambridge.
Harvard, Hopkins, Cambridge.
You also learned all about blind flying at Harvard, Hopkins and Cambridge.
He was going to Cambridge, but now he'll be a warrior and marry young.
I had hoped for Cambridge for you.
Weren't you at Cambridge? - Yes.
You know, I think I must have seen you somewhere since we left Cambridge.
Train now arriving at platform one. is the one-five from Cambridge.
The train now arriving at platform one. is the one-five from Cambridge.
Professor Marcus, who lodges with me, is having a trunk sent up from. where was it? Cambridge.
Coming in from Cambridge for Marcus. Right.
I taught Oriental languages at Cambridge before the war.
Cambridge don and all of that.
Even as a kid at Cambridge he knew all the answers.
Two gay young sparks at Cambridge.
What did you to that for? -l was at Cambridge.
No. I might go back to Cambridge.
Cambridge myself. Oh, thank you, Jones.
Pity it wasn't Cambridge.
I may have had just a menial job here,.but at Cambridge they gave me a first and a fellowship.
I got a scholarship to Cambridge.
Weren't you at Cambridge?
I think I must have seen you somewhere since we left Cambridge.
And how was Cambridge when you left it, Master Edward?
Oh, that's a Cambridge spark galvanometer.
Oh, Cambridge.
Weren't you at Cambridge? -Yes.
And they used to get mixed up with the letters. between Cambridge or Cambridgetown.
So letters that were to a person in Cambridgetown. used to go to a person in Cambridge.
Cheltenham, Harrow Cambridge and India?
For lovers of Nature such as myself, Cambridge has changed a great deal.
You know a lot of people in Cambridge?
A few years ago, we talked of nothing but him here in Cambridge.
But when all hope was gone, radio astronomers at Cambridge. reported that Mars Probe 7 had blasted off. and was heading back to Earth.

News and current affairs

CAMBRIDGE - Should more countries create independent fiscal advisory councils to infuse greater objectivity into national budget debates?
CAMBRIDGE - Until recently, cyber security has primarily interested computer geeks and cloak-and-dagger types.
CAMBRIDGE: The rich countries meeting in June at the G-7 Economic Summit in Cologne had some interesting things to declare about their relations with the poor countries.
CAMBRIDGE - Although I appreciate that exchange rates are never easy to explain or understand, I find today's relatively robust value for the euro somewhat mysterious.
CAMBRIDGE - When the next full-scale global financial crisis hits, let it not be said that the International Monetary Fund never took a stab at forestalling it.
CAMBRIDGE - No country in modern history has possessed as much global military power as the United States.
CAMBRIDGE - As Europe struggles to save the euro, the chorus of complaints about weak leadership in the world's major economies grows louder.
CAMBRIDGE - What a difference the crisis has made for the International Monetary Fund.
CAMBRIDGE - 2008 has been an exceptionally tumultuous year for exchange rates.
CAMBRIDGE: Efforts to make the world safe for investment bankers are underway once again.
CAMBRIDGE - Last year, the leaders of all five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council visited India, accompanied by delegations of business leaders.
CAMBRIDGE - Will war break out in the seas of East Asia?
CAMBRIDGE - There is no magic Keynesian bullet for the eurozone's woes. But the spectacularly muddle-headed argument nowadays that too much austerity is killing Europe is not surprising.
CAMBRIDGE - Many, if not all, of the world's most pressing macroeconomic problems relate to the massive overhang of all forms of debt.
NEW YORK - In the afternoon of July 16 two men appeared to be breaking into a fine house in an expensive area of Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Cambridge - It may take a few months or a couple of years, but one way or another the United States and other advanced economies will eventually recover from today's crisis.
CAMBRIDGE - In 2000, 189 countries collectively adopted the United Nations Millennium Declaration, which evolved into a set of concrete targets called the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
CAMBRIDGE - Who will suffer the longest and the most from the implosion in 2008-2009 of Wall Street and the ensuing world recession?
CAMBRIDGE - Although the strength of the US economy in 2010 remains uncertain, it is important to look ahead to its likely performance in the coming decade.
CAMBRIDGE - The United States still faces a dangerous fiscal deficit, but one might not know it from the complacency that dominates budget discussions in Washington.
CAMBRIDGE - With less than two months remaining before America's presidential election, much attention is focused on the state of the American economy and the challenges that it will present to the next president.
CAMBRIDGE - The household saving rate in the United States has tripled in the past three years.
CAMBRIDGE: Caught by rising inflation from oil prices and a soaring dollar, the European Central Bank (ECB) has raised interest rates yet another notch.
That is why he warned the cop, Sgt. James Crowley, a veteran of the Cambridge police force, not to mess with him.
CAMBRIDGE - As inflation continues to soar everywhere, maybe the world's central bankers need a jolt to awaken them from complacency.

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