Proper noun
A surname.
An unincorporated community in Albemarle County, Virginia, United States.
A village and civil parish in Gravesham borough, Kent, England (OS grid ref TQ6768).
A large village in Elmbridge borough, Surrey, England (OS grid ref TQ1060).
Source: en.wiktionary.orgAlex Cobham, chief executive at the Tax Justice Network, called on the government to introduce an excess profits tax “without delay”. Source: Internet
All those involved in both plots were arrested in July and tried in autumn 1603; Sir George Brooke was executed, but James, keen not to have too bloody a start to his reign, reprieved Cobham, Grey, and Markham while they were at the scaffold. Source: Internet
Cobham services opened on 13 September 2012. citation citation Originally, the M25 was unlit until except for sections around Heathrow, major interchanges and Junctions 23–30. Source: Internet
Cobham was a common butt of veiled satire in Elizabethan popular literature; he figures in Ben Jonson 's Every Man in His Humour and may have been part of the reason The Isle of Dogs was suppressed. Source: Internet
The City of Cranbrook says public works crews will be at work Friday to repair a water main break on Cobham Avenue near Signal Collision. Source: Internet
In 1520, Wyatt married Elizabeth Cobham, who told by many accounts, was not a wife of his choosing. 6E. Source: Internet