Englishfor English speakers
Clayton
properNoun
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A town, the county seat of Barbour County, Alabama; named for Georgia jurist and congressman Augustin Smith Clayton.
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A city in Contra Costa County, California, United States; named for founder Joel Henry Clayton.
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A town in Delaware; named for John M. Clayton.
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A city, the county seat of Rabun County, Georgia, United States; named for Augustin Smith Clayton.
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A city in Idaho; named for early settler Clayton Smith.
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A town in Indiana; named for Kentucky statesman Henry Clay.
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A village in Illinois; named for Henry Clay.
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A city in Iowa.
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A city in Kansas; named for the clay in the area.
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A town in Louisiana.
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A village in Michigan.
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A city, the county seat of St. Louis County, Missouri; named for landowner Ralph Clayton.
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A borough of New Jersey.
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A town, the county seat of Union County, New Mexico; named for Clayton Dorsey, son of Arkansas statesman Stephen Wallace Dorsey.
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A town and village in New York; named for lawyer and politician John M. Clayton.
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A town in North Carolina.
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A city in Ohio; named for John Clayton, a War of 1812 veteran.
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A town in Oklahoma; named for the city in Missouri.
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A town in Crawford County, Wisconsin.
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A town and village in Polk County, Wisconsin; named for Clayton Rogers, the foreman of the town's sawmill.
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A town in Winnebago County, Wisconsin.
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A suburb of Manchester, Greater Manchester, England; named for the Clayton family which owned land nearby.
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A village in South Yorkshire.
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A suburb of Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire.
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A village in Hassocks parish, Mid Sussex district, West Sussex (OS grid ref TQ2914).
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A village in West Yorkshire.
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A suburb of Melbourne, Victoria; named for proprietor John Hughes Clark.
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A en given name.
with
Preposition
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With is used to show the other people or things present when something happened
I went to school with my brother.
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With is used to describe something added to something else
The cat has a collar with a bell on it.
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With is used to show what thing is used to do something
He hit the nail with a hammer.
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Used to introduce non-finite and verbless clauses.
With the children so sick, we weren't able to get much work done.