1. stott - Noun
2. stott - Verb
3. Stott - Proper noun
stott (third-person singular simple present stotts, present participle stottin, simple past and past participle stotted)
(Tyneside) Alternative spelling of stot
stott m
(zoology) an inferior type of horse
Stott (plural Stotts)
A surname from Middle English.
Alison Rogers, "The Natasha Factor," Lothian Books, 2004, pp29ff Despite criticism of Stott Despoja's youth and lack of experience, the 2001 election saw the Democrats receive similar media coverage to the previous election. Source: Internet
Aboriginal senator Aden Ridgeway was deputy leader under Natasha Stott Despoja. Source: Internet
'A media outcry will force action,' Wakefield promised Stott, in an email that Wendy managed to obtain for me. Source: Internet
In 1999, she was appointed a Global Leader for Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum (WEF). citation Parliamentary leadership and deposition Stott Despoja was elected leader on 6 April 2001, replacing Meg Lees, who resigned from the party in July 2002. Source: Internet
Prosecutor Philip Stott showed jurors footage of a man crawling through a hole in the wall at William Hill. Source: Internet
As of 21 July 2015, Stott Despoja is a Patron of the Burnet Institute (Australia's largest virology and communicable disease research institute) and was a board member from 2008 to 2013. Source: Internet