Proper noun
A surname.
Any of various places, including:
Short for Berwick-upon-Tweed, a town in Northumberland, England.
A town in St. Mary Parish, Louisiana.
A town and census-designated place in York County, Maine.
A residential neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio.
A locality in McHenry County, North Dakota.
A borough in Columbia County, Pennsylvania.
A rural community in Kings County, New Brunswick, Canada.
A town in Nova Scotia, Canada. [From 1851]
Synonym: Congdon Settlement (historical), Curries Corner (historical), Davisons Corner (historical)
A village and civil parish in Wealden district, East Sussex, England (OS grid ref TQ5105).
A hamlet in Gloucestershire, England.
A suburb of Melbourne, in the City of Casey, Victoria, Australia, named after Berwick upon Tweed.
A number of places in the United States:
An unincorporated community in Warren County, Illinois.
An unincorporated community in Polk County, Iowa.
An unincorporated community in Nemaha County, Kansas.
An unincorporated community in Newton County, Missouri.
An unincorporated community in Seneca County, Ohio.
A farming community in Clutha district, Otago, New Zealand.
Source: en.wiktionary.orgAlmost fittingly, Read – like his great mate, Beaconsfield historian Lawrie Canning – ultimately lived in Berwick. Source: Internet
A man has been assaulted in his house during a daylight aggravated burglary in Berwick. Source: Internet
Achille exploded, Intrépide and San Augustín burned, and L'Aigle, Berwick, Fougueux and Monarca were wrecked in a gale following the battle. Source: Internet
A taste of the Netherlands is set to return to Akoonah Park, Berwick on Saturday 7 March. Source: Internet
Berwick could not halt a mainly Portuguese-allied army advance led by Das Minas, and on 25 June, Portuguese, Dutch, and British forward elements entered Madrid; by the time they took Saragossa on the 29th, they controlled the four chief cities of Spain. Source: Internet
David II pays homage to Edward III Finally, on 3 October 1357, David was released under the Treaty of Berwick, under which the Scots agreed to pay an enormous ransom of 100,000 merks for him (1 merk was ⅔ of an English pound) payable in 10 years. Source: Internet