kinsmen
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kinsmen — index affiliation (bloodline), blood, family (common ancestry), kindred Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Kinsmen — Kinsman Kins man (k[i^]nz man), n.; pl. {Kinsmen} (k[i^]nz men). A man of the same race or family; one related by blood. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Kinsmen Field House — is a multi purpose sport and recreation facility located in Edmonton, Canada.The facility was opened January 3 1968 and provides year round public facilities for sports and recreational activities. The Field House was intended to be the first… … Wikipedia
Kinsmen (disambiguation) — Kinsmen is a Canadian non profit service organization.Kinsmen may also refer to:* Kinsmen Field House, a multi purpose sport and recreation facility * Kinsmen Stadium, the home of the Oshawa Dodgers * The Two Noble Kinsmen , a Jacobean comedyee… … Wikipedia
Kinsmen Stadium — Infobox Stadium stadium name = Kinsmen Stadium location = Oshawa, Canada opened = renovated = owner = surface = Grass construction cost = architect = former names = Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium tenants = Oshawa Dodgers (IBL) (2002 present)… … Wikipedia
Kinsmen of the Dragon — infobox Book | name = Kinsmen of the Dragon title orig = translator = image caption = Dust jacket from the first edition author = Stanley Mullen illustrator = cover artist = Hannes Bok country = United States language = English series = genre =… … Wikipedia
kinsmen — noun An all Canadian Charitable service organization See … Wiktionary
kinsmen — Synonyms and related words: agnate, ancestry, blood, blood relation, blood relative, clansman, cognate, collateral, collateral relative, connections, consanguinean, distaff side, distant relation, enate, family, flesh, flesh and blood, folks,… … Moby Thesaurus
kinsmen — kins·man || kɪnzmÉ™n n. relative, family relation (especially a male); one who is of the same race or nationality … English contemporary dictionary
The Two Noble Kinsmen — is a Jacobean comedy, first published in 1634 and attributed to John Fletcher and William Shakespeare, based on The Knight s Tale from Geoffrey Chaucer s The Canterbury Tales . Formerly a point of controversy, the dual attribution is now… … Wikipedia