Top 10 similar words or synonyms for willcott

netser    0.805532

mombourquette    0.801280

sulentic    0.798723

debassige    0.794309

pustil    0.792674

iannece    0.791421

lewinson    0.787021

horbul    0.785449

sladky    0.785277

portz    0.784292

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for willcott

Article Example
Green Party of Canada candidates, 2004 Canadian federal election Willcott lost to Loyola Hearn of the Conservative Party of Canada. Willcott received 493 votes to Hearn's 13,330.
Choy Li Fut After Chan Yiu-Chi 陳耀墀 his son Chan Sun Chiu became the inheritor and Keeper of the style. Following the passing on April 22, 2013 of Chan Sun Chiu (Keeper of King Mui Choy Li Fut) 陈燊樵, all the descendants and known students become his current successors of the 5th generation of the Chan family lineage, they are; Chan Yong Jian, Chan Yong Fa and Niel Willcott respectively.
Bay d'Espoir Academy Bay d'Espoir Academy is a K-12 school in Milltown, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada that serves the Bay d'Espoir portion of the south-central part of the province. The principal is Connie Willcott and the vice-principal is Rebecca Parsons-Burden. The school operates under the Nova Central School District. It has been recognized throughout the province of Newfoundland and Labrador as one of the top three schools.
Mount Albert Railway Station Mount Albert Railway Station is in the suburb of Mount Albert on the Western Line of the Auckland railway network, near Unitec, a local tertiary education provider, and is popular with Unitec students. It has an island platform and is reached by a footbridge from Carrington Road at the northern end, an overbridge from New North Road on the eastern side, and a subway that runs between Willcott Street and New North Road at the southern end.
Gordon Fines Fines was the son of Richard Fines and Mabel Willcott, who had resided in Manitoba since 1876, shortly after the province's creation. He was educated in Baldur, and worked as an educator in Manitoba and Saskatchewan for eight years. He was elected to the Winnipeg school board in 1947, and to the Winnipeg city council in 1948. Fines also worked for the Canadian Pacific Railway, became active in the labour movement, and was local chair of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks Lodge 49. He returned to teaching later in life.