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"holp" Definitions
  1. a simple past tense of help.

9 Sentences With "holp"

How to use holp in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "holp" and check conjugation/comparative form for "holp". Mastering all the usages of "holp" from sentence examples published by news publications.

A fellow franchisee, Ron Holp, broke off and opened his own restaurant, which led to a lawsuit between Holp and Cassano's, in which Holp was accused of stealing pizza dough from the company. After Holp won the case, Glass asked if he could buy dough for Marion's. While Holp would not sell it, his wife showed Glass how to make the dough.
Holp Shuppan is headquartered in Misakichō."Company Overview of Holp Shuppan, Publishers Co., Ltd." (Archive) Businessweek. Retrieved on January 5, 2014.
The past participle form holp is an example of the clipped variant of the historical participial holpen.
Shigeru Mizuki wrote and illustrated Sōin Gyokusai Seyo!, which was first published in the August 1973 issue of Shūkan Gendai. In the same year, Kodansha released it in tankōbon format with the subtitle . In July 1985, Holp Shuppan published the work, and Kodansha re-released it on June 15, 1995.
They use such plural forms as > 'postes', 'beastes', 'nestes', 'ghostes', and analogous verb forms, 'costes' > and 'twistes'. They employ 'clumb' for 'climbed', 'wrop' for 'wrapped', > 'holp' for 'helped', and such redundancies as 'rifle-gun', 'rock-clift', > 'ham-meat' and 'tooth-dentist'. Peculiarly free from modern slang, their > vocabulary includes such a familiar term as 'budget' to signify a bag, > wallet, or bundle. The Smoke Holer is most precise: 'Is that a bushel > basket?' he is asked.
I Saw It premiered as a one-shot work in a September 30, 1972 special issue of Weekly Shōnen Jump, entitled Monthly Shōnen Jump featuring manga based on various creators' biographies. Monthly Shōnen Jump later split into its own manga anthology. Nakazawa's editor later urged him to write a longer series based on I Saw It, which became the series Barefoot Gen. I Saw It was later published as a part of a compilation of Nakazawa's short stories by Holp Shuppan, entitled .
Descended from a French-Canadian great-grandfather, Le Cain was born 5 March 1941 to John and Minnie Le Cain in Singapore but evacuated to Agra, India with his mother and other relations the following year to escape the Japanese invasion.Interviewed by Penny Sibson in 'Books for Keeps' Issue 47, November 1987 His father was captured and interned in Changi Prison."Errol Le Cain, The Enchanter of Images" (Holp, Japan 1992) p.92 Returning to Singapore after the war, he attended St. Patrick's Catholic school.
I Saw It: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima: A Survivor's True Story, titled in Japanese, is a one-shot manga by Keiji Nakazawa that first appeared in 1972 as a 48-page feature in the magazine Monthly Shōnen Jump. The story was later published in a collection of Nakazawa's short stories by Holp Shuppan. I Saw It is an autobiographical piece following the life of Nakazawa from his youngest days in post-war Hiroshima, up until his adulthood. I Saw It became the predecessor for Nakazawa's popular manga series Barefoot Gen.
Kodansha published it in different lines and formats; on July 28, 1978 under the Osamu Tezuka Manga Complete Works line; on June 4, 1995 under the KC Grand Collection line; on November 12, 1999 under the Manga Bunko line; and on May 12, 2010 under the Osamu Tezuka Bunko Complete Works line. The third serialization was a rewriting of the Shōjo Club version and ran from January 1963 to October 1966 in Nakayoshi, and was originally published into five tankōbon volumes by Kodansha between August 15, 1964 and June 15, 1966. It was followed by several rereleases and reissues; three volumes were published by Shogakukan in pocketbook format between March 10, and May 10, 1969; three volumes were published between June 13, 1977 and January 11, 1978 under the Osamu Tezuka Manga Complete Works line by Kodansha; in June 1982 it was published by Holp Shuppan; on December 14, 1994 it was released under KC Grand Collection line; on October 9, 1999 under Manga Bunko Line; and on October 9, 2009 under the Osamu Tezuka Bunko Complete Works line. A Kanzen Fukkoku-ban edition, along with a "Special Box", was published on May 29, 2009.

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