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Discover LudwigThe word 'Tyler' is correct and usable in written English
It is a proper noun and can be used as a name for people, places, or things. Example: Tyler walked down the street, admiring the colorful buildings and bustling city life.
Dictionary
Tyler
noun
Alternative form of tiler
synonyms
Exact(18)
This means that Randy Jackson will still be there, calling everyone "dog" a lot and complaining that he can't feel things, with Tyler looking likely to assume the barmy, shaggy-haired, largely incomprehensible role vacated by Paula Abdul.
For every Drake, Nicki Minaj and obligatory rap in the middle of Olly Murs new single, there is an MIA or Tyler, the Creator.
"For along time music was black or white, but now there's people like Tyler the Creator making a huge impact.
As one of the first hip-hop acts of the festival, Bronson set a high standard that other acts, including Tyler, the Creator, who sat stageside the entire show, will have to try to match.
And the ultrasound did indeed boost their release.How that came about is not absolutely certain, but Dr Tyler thinks the shaking that his ultrasound gave to the cells in question opened up some of their ion channels.
TYLER COWEN reproduces two quotes on macroeconomic stabilisation and crisis.
Similar(42)
A small book but a big, worthwhile question.* "The Great Stagnation; How America Ate All the Low-Hanging Fruit of Modern History, Got Sick, and Will (Eventually) Feel Better", by Tyler Cowen, January 2011.
Tyler Cowen links today to new research by Lauren Cohen, Joshua Coval, and Christopher Malloy, who chart the impact of increased government spending on private investment.
Tyler Blackett played as the left-sided centre-half alongside Phil Jones and Chris Smalling, with Reece James replacing Shaw as the left wing-back in the 3-4-1-2 3-4-1-2 3-4-1-2 3-4-1-2n Gaal'systemp since arriving from thatWorld Cup.
Lara Tyler, an interior designer from East Grinstead, said: "I've been delayed an hour today, this morning it took 30 minutes more because I was diverted to London Bridge and I've been delayed 30 minutes here already.
This spring the photographer Dominick Tyler is publishing Uncommon Ground, which pairs 100 place words with 100 photographs of the phenomena to which the words refer, from arête ("a sharp-edged mountain ridge, often between two glacier-carved corries") to zawn (a Cornish term for a "wave-smashed chasm in a cliff").
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