Englishfor English speakers
Oklahoma English
Meaning Oklahoma meaning
What does Oklahoma mean?
Definitions in simple English
Oklahoma
Oklahoma
Synonyms Oklahoma synonyms
What other words have the same or similar meaning as Oklahoma?
Examples Oklahoma examples
How do I use Oklahoma in a sentence?
Simple sentences
The world's first parking meter was installed in Oklahoma City in 1935.
Movie subtitles
The architecture has a little feeling of Missouri Gothic and the furniture sort of leans toward Oklahoma Renaissance with a tiny touch of Grand Rapids.
The Governor of Oklahoma to regulate oil production.
He smells Oklahoma.
You read about that gangster massacre in Oklahoma City?
Flash, latest bulletin on Mantee Massacre in Oklahoma City.
Mr. Leeson's just from Oklahoma, Lucy.
Mr. Leeson, won't you tell us something about Oklahoma?
Oklahoma's pretty swell.
Oklahoma.
I mean Oklahoma.
So you're going to live in Oklahoma, Lucy?
We're going to live right in Oklahoma City.
Not Oklahoma City itself?
The architecture has a little feeling of Missouri Gothic, and the furniture sort of leans toward Oklahoma Renaissance, with a tiny touch of Grand Rapids.
Oklahoma oil doing Hollywood.
I'm the millionaire oil king from Clemp City, Oklahoma.
My husband is the multi-est millionaire in Oklahoma.
Mr. Leeson's just from Oklahoma, Lucy. He's a stranger in town.
I know I'll enjoy Oklahoma City.
I hope you are going to like Oklahoma, because I'm going to ask you..
What part of Oklahoma you from, anyhow?
Oklahoma E-L-2-0-4.
News and current affairs
Nim was born in 1973, in a primate research facility in Oklahoma, and was taken from his mother when he was only ten days old, to be used in a sign-language experiment.
Herbert Terrace, the Columbia University psychologist who was directing the project, decided to end it and sent Nim back to the primate facility in Oklahoma.
In our attempts to defend and justify ourselves over the past year, we Saudis learned about the consequences of extremism at Waco, Texas and Oklahoma City.
But the Americans studied and analyzed minutely the Waco and Oklahoma City incidents on their own.
Think, for example of Timothy McVeigh, who bombed the federal building in Oklahoma City in 1995, or the Aum Shinrykio cult that released poison gas in the Tokyo subway system the same year.
Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber who murdered 168 people in 1995, thought he was defending the US Constitution against a predatory federal government.
A climate of distrust can also trigger extreme actions by deviant members of the population, such as the bombing of a federal office building in Oklahoma City in 1995.