Proper noun
Fairbairn (plural Fairbairns)
A surname.
A committee was elected to realise the planned institution, including Wood, Fairbairn, Heywood, Roberts and John Davies and the Institute opened in 1825 with Heywood as chairman. Source: Internet
A spokesperson for the department, Heather Fairbairn, said a third commissioner has been identified, and the federal government is in the final stages of the vetting process. Source: Internet
CBI boss Carolyn Fairbairn said there were areas where Britain could benefit from divergence from EU norms but there should be no "obligation to diverge". Source: Internet
Grace and Christology in the Early Church by Donald Fairbairn 2006 ISBN 0-19-929710-X page 180 Samuel Taylor Coleridge was, however, an example of a psilanthropist. Source: Internet
Nicholas Fairbairn, the MP, announced the anagram in a letter to The Times: 'Monster hoax by Sir Peter S.' ("Loch Ness Monster Shown a Hoax by Another Name." Source: Internet
Isle News, 8 September 2009 – As part of the ongoing growth at Fairbairn Private Bank, Nigel Hawkins has been appointed as senior private banker, increasing the private banking team, at the bank’s new office in London. Source: Internet