Proper noun
Liddell (plural Liddells)
A surname.
Two men wrote a lexicon, Liddell and Scott; Some parts were clever, but some parts were not. Hear, all ye learned, and read me this riddle, How the wrong part wrote Scott, and the right part wrote Liddell. Henry George Liddell
Abrahams and Liddell did race against each other once, but not quite as depicted in the film, which shows Liddell winning the final of the 100 yards against a shattered Abrahams at the 1923 AAA Championship at Stamford Bridge. Source: Internet
A brief scene depicting a pre-Olympics cricket game between Abrahams, Liddell, Montague, and the rest of the British track team appears shortly after the beginning of the original film. Source: Internet
A former chief financial officer at General Motors and Microsoft, Liddell is tipped as the favourite by some because no US citizen has ever led the OECD since its creation in 1961 despite the US being the biggest contributor to its budget. Source: Internet
After the war Fuller collaborated with his junior B. H. Liddell Hart in developing new ideas for the mechanisation of armies, launching a crusade for the mechanization and modernization of the British Army. Source: Internet
And Liddell says the state has been especially focused on making sure the hard-to-count population, including minorities, elderly, foreign-born and those with limited English-speaking abilities, are accurately counted. Source: Internet