Associations to the word «Clift»
Noun
- Montgomery
- Hepburn
- Eleanor
- Winters
- Newsweek
- Sinatra
- Hitchcock
- Burt
- Kazan
- Marilyn
- Katharine
- Mclaughlin
- Fay
- Gable
- Shelley
- Compton
- Monroe
- Monty
- Glamorgan
- Nuremberg
- Eternity
- Heiress
- Lancaster
- Wilder
- Johnston
- Freud
- Starring
- Maximilian
- Holden
- Taylor
- Ethel
- Judy
- Robbins
- Garland
- Olivia
- Dean
- Wallace
- Patricia
- Clifton
- Clive
- Filming
- Chandler
- Lions
- Actor
- Wayne
- Elizabeth
- Brooks
- Calgary
- Donna
- Hollywood
- Clark
- Tracy
- Eva
- Newfoundland
- Newman
- Documentary
- Richardson
- Screenwriter
- Bacon
- Episcopal
- Oscar
- Drama
- Fred
- Alfred
- Democracy
- Brook
- Kenneth
- Movie
- Spencer
- William
- Jean
- Stanley
- Judgment
- Film
- Robert
- Marie
- Morris
- Matthew
- Houston
- Tennessee
- Hotel
- Douglas
- Nomination
- Bill
- George
- Role
- Frank
- Sydney
Wiktionary
CLIFT, noun. (now rare) A cliff. [from 14th c.]
Wise words
Language is a process of free creation; its laws and
principles are fixed, but the manner in which the principles
of generation are used is free and infinitely varied. Even
the interpretation and use of words involves a process of
free creation.