Macdonald$521109$ - translation to English
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Macdonald$521109$ - translation to English

FAMILY NAME
Macdonalds'; Mr MacDonald; Mr. MacDonald; MacDonald (name); Macdonald (name)

Macdonald      
n. Macdonald, Nachname; Name mehrerer historischer Persönlichkeiten
Sir John Alexander Macdonald         
  • Lady Agnes Macdonald
  • Battle of the Windmill, near Prescott, Upper Canada, November 13, 1838
  • Canadian stamp honouring Macdonald, 1927
  • Timeline of the evolution of Canada's boundaries since 1867
  • Funeral of Sir John A. Macdonald in [[Cataraqui Cemetery]], Kingston, Ontario
  • Portrait of Isabella Clark Macdonald, artist unknown
  • Conservative]] election poster from 1891
  • John A. Macdonald in 1858
  • Protestants demanded Riel be executed; Catholics wanted him to live. The decision for execution alienated Francophones.
  • Macdonald uses his parliamentary majority to roll to victory over Liberal leader [[Edward Blake]] and his party in this 1884 cartoon by [[John Wilson Bengough]].
  • The Quebec Conference. Macdonald is seated fourth from left.
  • 2}}-storey stone house on Kingston's Rideau Street.
  • In this Bengough cartoon, Macdonald (centre, ankles crossed) rides the elephant of the National Policy into power in the 1878 election, trampling the Liberals underfoot. Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie is also being strangled by the elephant's trunk.
  • The statue in the [[Macdonald Monument]] in Montreal in 2011
  • "We don't want you here." Annexation to the United States was a political issue in Canada's early days. In this anti-annexation cartoon by [[John Wilson Bengough]] from an 1869 issue of Grinchuckle, Uncle Sam is given the boot by Young Canada as John Bull looks on approvingly.
  • "Whither are we drifting?" Macdonald is shown triumphant at obtaining a prorogation, but is trampling a weeping Canada and apparently drunk with bottle in pocket in this August 1873 cartoon by [[John Wilson Bengough]]. Macdonald is depicted claiming clean hands, but with "Send me another $10,000" written on his palm.
1ST PRIME MINISTER OF CANADA (1867–1873; 1878–1891)
Sir John A. Macdonald; Sir John MacDonald; John A. MacDonald; John Alexander, Sir Macdonald; Macdonald, John Alexander, Sir; Sir John Alexander Macdonald; Sir Macdonald; John Alexander Macdonald; Sir John Macdonald; Macdonald, Sir John Alexander; John A. McDonald; Sir John A. MacDonald; Old Tomorrow; The Jamaica; Margaret Mary Theodora Macdonald; John A MacDonald; Sir john a macdonald; John a mcdonald; Sir John A Macdonald; Sir john a mcdonald; Sir john a. mcdonald; John a. mcdonald; John A.; John A Macdonald; John A; Macdonaldian; Prime Minister Macdonald; Sir John A MacDonald; Sir John A; John A. Mcdonald; Macdonald, John A.
n. Sir John Alexander Macdonald (1815-1891) in Schottland geborener kanadischer Premierminister (1867-1873, 1878-1891)
Country Joe McDonald         
  • Country Joe McDonald (Kralingen, 1970)
  • McDonald at the [[LBJ Library]] in 2016
  • Peter Albin]], [[Joel Selvin]], McDonald
AMERICAN MUSICIAN AND ANTI-WAR ACTIVIST
‘Country’ Joe McDonald; Country Joe MacDonald; 'Country' Joe McDonald; Joseph Allen McDonald
Country Joe McDonald, (geboren 1942) amerikanischer Rocksänger und Gitarrenspieler, Mitglied der psychodellischen Musikband "Country Joe and the Fish"

Definition

Heinleiner
One who follows the teachings of the author Robert A. Heinlein.
First seen in the book Steel Beach by John Varley.
A. Do you believe in gun control laws?
B. No way - I'm a Heinleiner! An armed society, is a polite society!

Wikipedia

MacDonald (surname)

MacDonald, Macdonald, and McDonald are surnames of both Irish and Scottish Origin. In the Scottish Gaelic and Irish languages they are patronymic, referring to an ancestor with given name Donald.