Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
He was the first native Chicagoan to assume the office.
I liked being out with a real Chicagoan who was proud of his city, and enthusiastic.
The program's best part, however, was the chance to see the city through the eyes of a real Chicagoan who wanted to show off his home.
None of this was news to the average Chicagoan.
The 37-story, 221-unit Chicagoan has been open 18 months, making it the oldest of the new apartment buildings.
First editor of the Chicagoan, a writer and literary critic.
Ask any longtime Chicagoan what it has been like.
Obama says it "wasn't easy news" to hear, when the Chicagoan told him he wanted to leave.
Started in 2008, it matured into a publication relevant to its Chicagoan and international audience.
All that said, and like any other proud Chicagoan, I have my own nomination for a good book.
He contributed to the literary and arts magazine The Chicagoan.
The typical Chicagoan did not lose sleep over this subtle election irregularity.
He created car cards, posters, and other commercial art before becoming the featured artist of the Chicagoan.
The author of the story, a thirty-six-year-old Chicagoan, quickly complied.
The Chicagoan had expected the evening to be a perfunctory affair, but he was soon disabused.
The man is Robert Kelly, 36, married with three children, a lifetime Chicagoan.
The bus driver was evidently a native Chicagoan.
The award was to be "presented annually to the Chicagoan who, over the years has contributed most to philately."
As the Chicagoan Dinah Washington sang, what a difference a day makes.
Chick Evans was a Chicagoan who boasted a successful amateur career.
Insul was born and raised as a native Chicagoan.
Princeton has lucrative offers out to "half of the Chicago department," as one Chicagoan anxiously put it.
The appointment of a Chicagoan at Commerce is going to raise our visibility around the world."
He was named by the Chicago Tribune as a Chicagoan of the Year for 2004.
Clarke's decision to build south of the River made him the first wealthy Chicagoan to build there.