Proper noun
Keeble
A surname.
A good example of this kind of planner was Lewis Keeble and his standard textbook, Principles and Practice of Town and Country Planning, published in 1951. Source: Internet
N. H. Keeble, The Literary Culture of Nonconformity in Later Seventeenth-Century England (1987), p. 153. Puritans eliminated the use of musical instruments in their religious services for theological and practical reasons. Source: Internet
Suffolk's director of public health Stuart Keeble said: 'I'd like to reassure people that this is, at this stage, a relatively small number of cases and that the situation is being very carefully managed by all the partners working closely together.' Source: Internet