carlton

listen to the pronunciation of carlton
İngilizce - İngilizce
Any of several placenames in northern England
A habitational surname. from any of these places
{i} male first name; family name
An English habitational surname from any of these places
Carlton Steve Steven Norman Carlton Lewis Frederick Carlton Morse Carlton E
Carlton E. Morse
born June 4, 1901, Jennings, La., U.S. died May 24, 1993, Sacramento, Calif. U.S. radio writer and producer. He worked as a newspaper reporter before joining NBC radio as a writer in 1930. Morse wrote, directed, and produced many radio programs, including the highly popular soap opera One Man's Family (1932-59; television, 1949-52), the drama I Love a Mystery (1939-44, 1949-52), and the soap opera The Woman in My House (1951-59)
Frederick Carlton Lewis
born July 1, 1961, Birmingham, Ala., U.S. U.S. track-and-field athlete. He qualified for the 1980 Olympics but did not participate, because of the U.S. boycott of the Moscow games. At the 1984 Olympics he won the 100-m and 200-m races, the long jump, and the 4 100-m relay. At the 1988 Olympics he won the long jump (becoming the first athlete ever to win that event consecutively) and the 100-m race and received a silver medal in the 200-m. In 1992 he again won the long jump and anchored the winning U.S. 4 100-m relay team, and in 1996 he astounded observers by winning a fourth consecutive long-jump title
Ritz Carlton
worldwide chain of luxury hotels
Steve Carlton
in full Steven Norman Carlton born Dec. 22, 1944, Miami, Fla., U.S. U.S. baseball pitcher. Carlton pitched in junior college before signing with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1965. A left-handed pitcher, he won 20 or more games in a single season six times and was a four-time Cy Young Award winner for best pitcher. He played for the Cardinals (1966-70), the Philadelphia Phillies (1971-83), and several other teams. His career total of 4,136 strikeouts is second only to that of Nolan Ryan
carlton