| edmonton | (n) the capital of the province of Alberta |
| edmontonia | (n) heavily armored and highly spiked dinosaur with semi-upright posture |
| edmontosaurus | (n) duck-billed dinosaur from Canada found as a fossilized mummy with skin |
| genus edmontosaurus | (n) duck-billed dinosaurs of Canada |
| piedmont | (n) the plateau between the coastal plain and the Appalachian Mountains: parts of Virginia and North and South Carolina and Georgia and Alabama |
| piedmont | (n) a gentle slope leading from the base of a mountain to a region of flat land |
| piedmont | (n) the region of northwestern Italy; includes the Po valley, Syn. Piemonte |
| piedmont glacier | (n) a type of glaciation characteristic of Alaska; large valley glaciers meet to form an almost stagnant sheet of ice, Syn. Piedmont type of glacier |
| goncourt | (n) French writer who collaborated with his brother Jules de Goncourt on many books and who in his will established the Prix Goncourt (1822-1896), Syn. Edmond de Goncourt, Edmond Louis Antoine Huot de Goncourt |
| halley | (n) English astronomer who used Newton's laws of motion to predict the period of a comet (1656-1742), Syn. Edmund Halley, Edmond Halley |
| hoyle | (n) English writer on card games (1672-1769), Syn. Edmond Hoyle |
| malone | (n) English scholar remembered for his chronology of Shakespeare's plays and his editions of Shakespeare and Dryden (1741-1812), Syn. Edmund Malone, Edmond Malone |
| rostand | (n) French dramatist and poet whose play immortalized Cyrano de Bergerac (1868-1918), Syn. Edmond Rostand |