Proper noun
Tuchman (plural Tuchmans)
A surname from German.
The CEO, Donny Tuchman, showed reporters April emails where he asked state health officials for assistance, and was turned down. Source: Internet
The late Harvard University History Professor, Barbara Tuchman, in a book, The March of Folly described folly in government as the pursuit of something that had proved to be unachievable during the time of that pursuit. Source: Internet
Historian Barbara W. Tuchman in The Guns of August writes of Alexandra as tsarina, "Though it could hardly be said that the Czar governed Russia in a working sense, he ruled as an autocrat and was in turn ruled by his strong-willed if weak-witted wife. Source: Internet
Barbara Tuchman 's The March of Folly begins with an extensive analysis of the Laocoön story. Source: Internet
Tuchman attempted yet again the following day, asking if he could send the home’s suspected coronavirus cases to the Javits Center or the Comfort. Source: Internet
Tuchman, Barbara, The Guns of August 1962, Ballantine Books reprint 1994, p. 8 In later life she may have suffered an addiction to the barbiturate Veronal: "I'm literally saturated with it," she confessed to a friend in 1914. Source: Internet