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"pseud" Definitions
  1. pretending to know a lot about a particular subject in order to impress other people

91 Sentences With "pseud"

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

Her son, Art, is a hapless nature blogger and pointless pseud.
Mr Baudet is dismissed by the establishment as a pseud-in-a-suit, but his calls for the Dutch to leave the EU resonate.
When the Russian coach who led Hope to Pseud-olympic glory kills herself, Hope gets a letter telling her that Amherst's newest Olympic hopeful, Maggie Townsend (Haley Lu Richardson), needs a new and significantly less deceased coach for the games in Toronto later that year.
Henryk Antoni Pracki pseud. “Rola”, the district's radio officer Lt Edward Nowicki pseud. “Tyczka”, and the commander of the Brok station Lt Henryk Dubois pseud. “Ryszard”.
131.. The massacre echoed widely. Reports about the Polish underground and underground press informed about it, T. II 83–84 and 173.. In retaliation for the massacre and pacification of Sochy, partisan units of the Polish Underground State of the Home Army commanded by Adam Piotrowski, pseud. "Dolina", Jan Turowski pseud. "Norbert" and Tadeusz Kuncewicz pseud.
Długoborska was actively engaged in the underground independence movement and cooperated closely with the Home Army “Opocznik” division. She gave shelter to Home Army officers, among whom were Władysław Reda pseud. “Jeliński”, Maj. Eugeniusz Mieszkowski pseud. “Ostry”, Maj.
Der Einzige was the title of a German individualist anarchist magazine. It appeared in 1919, as a weekly, then sporadically until 1925 and was edited by cousins Anselm Ruest (pseud. for Ernst Samuel) and Mynona (pseud. for Salomo Friedlaender).
Der Einzige was the title of a German individualist anarchist magazine. It appeared in 1919, as a weekly, then sporadically until 1925 and was edited by cousins Anselm Ruest (pseud. for Ernst Samuel) and Mynona (pseud. for Salomo Friedlaender).
Dolgellau: E. W. Evans. Gruffydd, William John, pseud. ‘Elerydd’, ed. (1994) Tua Soar.
Ernst Wilhelm Eschmann (pseud. Leopold Dingräve, Von Severus, 1904 - 1987) was a German author, sociologist and playwright.
Anne "Annie" Elizabeth Nicholson Ireland pseud. Mrs Alexander Ireland (1842 – 4 October 1893) was an English writer and biographer.
The magazine has popularised the phrases "The Establishment" (1955), "nanny state" (1965),"pseud" (1960s), "young fogey" (1984) and "virtue signalling" (2015).
Miniatura, Kraków 2005, # Młode słowa, Wyd. Miniatura, Kraków 2007, # Delikatne miejsce, Wyd. Unibook, 2009 # CIEMNOOKA,(pseud. Dawid Glen), Hsg. e-bookowo.
Literary history has not been kind to Della Cruscan poetry, which was criticised as sloppy and emotional. Merry was the subject of a satirical poem, "The Baviad", written by a contemporary, William Gifford. Cowley's poetry was published as The Poetry of Anna Matilda [pseud.] Containing A Tale for Jealousy, The Funeral, Her Correspondence with Della Crusca [pseud.
X.Y.Z. (Pseud.), 'Topographical description of Wroxton in Oxfordshire', Gentleman's Magazine Vol. 67 Pt. 1 (1797), pp. 106-10, at p. 107 (Google).
Bryan Waller Procter (pseud. Barry Cornwall) (21 November 17875 October 1874) was an English poet who served as a Commissioner in Lunacy.
Karl Christian Ernst Graf von Bentzel-Sternau, pseud. Horatio Cocles, (9 April 1767 – 13 August 1849) was a German statesman, editor and writer.
Charles Gavan Duffy, The ballad poetry of Ireland, 4th ed. (1845), p. 83.John O'Hanlon, The Poetical Works of Lageniensis [pseud.] (1893), p. 140.
Hall, Adam (pseud). The Striker Portfolio. Fontana 1975, p. 114 During times of extreme stress, he develops a nervous tic in his left eyelid.Hall, Adam (pseud). The Quiller Memorandum, Pyramid, 1966, p. 176 Quiller's narration of the tradecraft he routinely employs is one of the defining elements of the novels. There are detailed descriptions of "shadowing," the art of following targets and evading surveillance.
Ellen Kyle Noel pseud. Mrs. J.V. Noel. (22 December 1815-20 June 1873), was an Irish Canadian writer who published a number of novels through journals and serialization.
His real name is Christian Saint-Preux Langlade.United States Copyright Office. Catalogue entries Registration Number: PA0000020602 Title: Expression : extrait : piano et chant / [musique] Saint-Preux [pseud. of Christian Langlade].
Halpine in the 1860s Charles Graham Halpine (Halpin) (pseud. Miles O'Reilly) (20 November 1829 – 3 August 1868) was an Irish journalist, author and soldier during the American Civil War.
The species name (lanigera) means wool-bearing; the genus name 'looking like' (pseud) 'good' (eu) 'eyebrows' (ophrys). Euophrys ('beautiful eyebrows') is another genus from which Pseudeuophrys has been split off.
Thus Chester (below). She is stated to be Henry's mother by A. Ryrie, 'Brinklow [Brinkelow], Henry [pseud. Roderyck or Roderigo Mors] (d. 1545/6)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004).
116-122, Oxford University Press 1981A. H. M. Kirke-Greene, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 'Guggisberg Sir (Frederick) Gordon [pseud. Ubique] (1869-1930), army office and colonial governor', 2004 and Oct.
Hans Zehrer (pseud. Hans Thomas, 22 June 1899 - 23 August 1966) was a German philosopher and journalist. He edited a leading right-wing journal, Die Tat, and founded the Tat Circle.
Mrs. Prosser (pseud.) or Sophie Amelia Prosser, born Sophia Amelia Dibdin (17 May 1807 - 14 February 1882) was a British author. She was known for her sentimental morality tales and fables.
The species name refers to the similarities in external and male genital characters with Leucinodes orbonalis and is derived from Greek pseud(o) (meaning false) and orbonalis (the name of the similar species).
Jan Wojciech Skalmowski (pseud. Maciej Broński, M. Broński, Piotr Meynert), born 24 June 1933 in Poznań, died 18 July 2008 in Brussels, was a Polish scholar, orientalist, essayist, writer, journalist and literary critic.
Petro Yefymenko [or Jefymenko Ukrainian: Петро Єфименко, pseud. Petro Odynets], (2 September 1835, Velykyi Tokmak, Berdiansk county, Ukraine – 7 May 1908, Saint Petersburg, Russia) was a Ukrainian ethnographer and historian, statistician by profession.
Edward Phillips, The New World of Words: or, Universal English Dictionary, 7th ed., London 1720, s.v. One 18th-century recipe uses just a batter, not a béchamel binder.Menon (pseud.), La cuisinière bourgeoise, 1769, p.
He was a member of the Royal Commission for the World Fair 1873, and also collected autographs. Vesque de Püttlingen, Johann Freiherr (Pseud. Johann Hoven) Oesterreichisches Musiklexikon online ed. Rudolf Flotzinger He died in Vienna.
Mah Atmah Amsumata (pseud. of Norman Robert Westfall) (May 18, 1896 - August 25, 1960), Lord Maitreya or the New Golden Age, pp. 291-292 (1942; repr. Kessinger Publishing, 2004; ) Sindelar was personally acquitted of the charges against him.
Mary Elizabeth Hawker (1848–1908) was a Scottish-born writer of novellas and short stories. From 1890, she wrote under the pseudonym Lanoe Falconer.Elizabeth Lee: "Hawker, Mary Elizabeth [pseud. Lanoe Falconer]" (Oxford: OUP, 2004) Retrieved 26 July 2018.
Vernon Rosario (pp. 26–45). New York: Routledge, 1997. Another later German anarchist publication influenced deeply by Stirner was Der Einzige. It appeared in 1919, as a weekly, then sporadically until 1925 and was edited by cousins Anselm Ruest (pseud.
Wasyl Barka Wasyl Barka (pseud. of Vasyl Ocheret, born 16 July 1908 in the village of Solonytsia near Lubny, Poltava Governorate, died 11 April 2003 in Liberty, New York) was an American-residing Ukrainian poet, writer, literary critic, and translator.
Greene was born Chris Nelson in Salinas, California.California Copywrite OfficeGone wanderin' Type of Work:Musical work Registration Number / Date:PAu002711637 / September 2, 2002 Date of Creation:2002 Title:Gone wanderin'. Description:Compact disc. Copyright Claimant:Chris Nelson, 1980– (Jackie Greene, pseud.) Notes:Words & music (collection) Names:pseud.
The species name is derived from Greek pseud (meaning false) and the name of the similar species Dichomeris deltaspis., 2004: New species of the genus Dichomeris Hübner (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae) from Thailand. Transactions of the Lepidopterical Society of Japan 55 (3): 147-159. .
Aneta Florczyk pseud. Atena (born 26 February 1982 in Malbork) - is a Polish female athlete and strongwoman. Aneta Florczyk started her career at the age of 16, as a powerlifter. She won Polish Championships several times, and in 2000 became European Champion.
Economic Sophisms was translated and adapted for an American readership in 1867 by the economist and historian of money Alexander del Mar, writing under the pseudonym Emile Walter.Walter, Emile (del Mar, Alexander, pseud.) (1867). What is free trade? An adaptation of Frederick Bastiat's "Sophismes economiques".
Marilyn Malina, "Picken, Joanna Belfrage [pseud. Alpha] (1798–1859)", The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Retrieved 4 April 2018. She left for Canada in 1842 with other family members where she became a music teacher, writing poetry under the name "Alpha".
Xavier Saint-Just pseud, of Georges Neczpal (age unknown) was a 20th-century French artist, painter and illustrator. He illustrated ads for many of the top magazines during the 1950s and 1960s.Catalog of Copyright Entries. Third Series: 1967: January-June By Library of Congress.
Certain other common factors appear. First, he is almost always reluctant to take on a mission and he regularly tells the reader all Bureau operatives have an option to refuse. Manipulation to get him to agree to the mission is usually necessary.Hall, Adam (pseud).
Border Bairn is set around Jedburgh, while Lady of the Manse has a Berwickshire setting. Derwent's Manse books drew on her experiences keeping house for her Church of Scotland minister brotherMoira Burgess: "Dodd, Elizabeth (pseud. Lavinia Derwent)", ODNB (Oxford, UK, 2005). Retrieved 23 February 2020.
Madeleine Mathilde Henrey (1906–2004, née Gal, pseud. Mrs Robert Henrey) was a French-born author of over 30 books, mainly of an autobiographical nature, that enjoyed considerable fame in post-war Britain and established rural lid- off-a-small-town titles as a genre.
Further additions were made over the following centuries: the property passed from the Popes to the Norths in 1677. The elaborate monuments of the early Pope and North residents are in Wroxton church.X.Y.Z. (Pseud.), 'Topographical description of Wroxton in Oxfordshire', Gentleman's Magazine Vol. 67 Pt. 1 (1797), pp.
Chudleigh appears as a character in T. H. White's non-fiction The Age of ScandalT. H. White, The Age of Scandal, Faber & Faber, 2011, and in Theodore Sturgeon's historical romance I, Libertine, which began as a hoax.Frederick R. Ewing (pseud. of Theodore Sturgeon), I, Libertine, Ballantine Books, 1956.
White, John A. Brown, Alfred John [pseud. Julian Laverack] (1894–1969) (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, on-line edition, 2019) He subsequently returned to the Bradford wool trade and established an overseas textiles sales agency which he ran together with one of his sons.Burns, Thomas. Alfred John Brown: Yorkshire's Tramping Author.
The Swedish author F.J. Nordstedt (pseud. Christian Braw) wrote about the battle in his novel Caporetto. The bloody aftermath of Caporetto was vividly described by Ernest Hemingway in his novel A Farewell to Arms. Curzio Malaparte wrote an excoriation of the battle in his first book, Viva Caporetto, published in 1921.
The bombs seriously damaged the church and, to a lesser extent, a military field hospital located in one of the wings of the palace. Then Białowieża was taken over by the German 3rd Armored Division. On September 16, Podlasie Cavalry Brigade entered Białowieża. On September 20, general Zygmunt Podhorski pseud.
Kairosis is experienced by the reader of the modern novel when the character reaches a moment of psychological integration in time. Kairosis has been used as part of an attempt in role playing game (rpg) theory to grapple with the issue of immersion."Mo" pseud. Original post: Immersion Goals Borrowed from Literary Theory.
A Decca sample copy of Hall's recording lists Dave Williams as the sole writer. "Catalog of Copyright Entries: Third Series" lists the owners of the copyright as Dave Williams (David Williams) and Sunny David (pseud. of Miriam S. Davidson). On the Pop Chronicles documentary, Jerry Lee Lewis incorrectly credited Big Mama Thornton.
He died in 1595 and was buried at Stepney. His widow Anne Hopton died in 1599 and was buried at Wroxton, Oxfordshire, by Wroxton Abbey, the home of her daughter Anne, Countess of Downe.(Monumental Inscription to Anne Hopton at Wroxton), in X.Y.Z. (Pseud.), 'Topographical description of Wroxton in Oxfordshire', Gentleman's Magazine Vol. 67 Pt. 1 (1797), pp.
Born in Wealdstone in the London Borough of Harrow, James Reeves attended Stowe School, where he won a scholarship to Jesus College, Cambridge.Peter Hollingdale, "Reeves, John Morris [pseud. James Reeves", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. From 1932 to 1952 he taught English in a number of schools and teachers' training colleges, subsequently becoming a freelance author and editor later.
Roman Galinski (1905 - 1974) was a Polish-American activist, journalist and businessman. Born in Zbrucz (Podole Region), emigrated to US in 1922. Graduate of Alliance College and Cooper Union; editor of Przewodnik Katolicki (New Britain, Conn.), 1940-1945; founder and president of Edro Corp., producer of industrial washing machines, 1946-1974; journalist, author (sometimes under pseud.
In 1936, Hulbert promoted the work of the London Police Court Mission, which attempted to place offenders in useful work as an alternative to prison."Police Court Mission" (Letters), The Times, 19 November 1936. Hulbert was a member of the Anglo-German Fellowship and served on that organisation's Council in 1936–7;Gracchus (pseud.), "Your M.P.", Victor Gollancz, 1944, p. 43.
As late as the 1640s, Thomas Browne was still complaining that "Every ear is filled with the story of Frier Bacon, that made a brazen head to speak these words, Time is".Browne, Pseud. Epid., Bk. VII, Ch. xvii, §7. Greene's Bacon spent seven years creating a brass head that would speak "strange and uncouth aphorisms"Greene, Fr. Bacon, iii.168.
The film was based on a novel by Will Henry (pseud. of Heck Allen) which was published in 1963. The novel was based on the legend of Lost Adams Diggings. According to the legend, a teamster named Adams and some prospectors in Arizona were approached by a Mexican Indian named Gotch Ear, who offered to show them a canyon filled with gold.
Eileen Arbuthnot Robertson (10 January 1903 at Moor Lodge, South Holmwood, Surrey, baptised 18 March 1903 at St Mary's Church, Holmwood - 21 September 1961 in Hampstead, London) was an English novelist, critic and broadcaster.Nicola Beauman: 'Robertson, Eileen Arbuthnot (pseud. E. Arnot Robertson) (1903–1961)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online e. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, Sept 2004) Retrieved 5 September 2010.
In the course of the following year the latter engaged him as soloist with the London Henschel Orchestra.American Students' Census, Paris, 1903, Achievements of prominent Americans abroad; biographies of the greatest professors of singing in Paris, McProud, Laura (pseud. of Louella B. Mendenhall); Souvenir of the Louisiana Purchase, 1903, p. 127. In 1896 while a student in London, he was also busy singing at functions.
Joachim Chreptowicz pseud.: Jeden z współziomków (4 January 1729, Jasieniec near Navahradak – 4 March 1812), of Odrowąż Coat of Arms, was a Polish- Lithuanian nobleman, writer, poet, politician of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, marshal of the Lithuanian Tribunal and the last Grand Chancellor of Lithuania. He was a member of the Permanent Council, activist of the Commission of National Education, physiocrat and a vivid supporter of the Targowica Confederation.
The generic name is formed from the Greek words pseud (meaning false) and koleps (meaning bent knee) and refers to the dissimilarity of Koleps and Pseudokoleps in genital characters despite sharing bifurcate apices of the ventral part of the valva. The specific name akainae is derived from Greek akaina (meaning thorn or spine) and refers to the downward pointed, thornlike proximal flange of the dorsal part of the valva.
While never a formal organization, there was a tendency within the Polish Communist Party usually known as the "three Ws" after the leaders -- Adolf Warski, Henryk Walecki, Maria Koszutska (pseud. Wera Kostrzewa). As the Party was already underground in Poland, and the communists already weak the group decided not to create a formal organization, though they were often depicted as followers of Brandler and Thalheimer by the leadership. All three died in Stalinist gulags.
Hulbert remained involved in the Anglo-German Fellowship after the Munich Agreement, when it transformed into a private company; he was one of the directors.Gracchus (pseud.), "Your M.P.", Victor Gollancz, 1944, p. 47. However, at the outbreak of the Second World War, Hulbert enlisted in the Royal Air Force, serving in combat and achieving the rank of Wing Commander. In 1943, he left to be British Liaison officer with the Free Polish forces.
Five have been identified to date (2011.) He also exhibited paintings and drawings at the Society of British Artists and the New Watercolour Society 1832-7. He co-operated with Alfred Crowquill (pseud. of Alfred Henry Forester 1804-72) in Geo William Reynolds "Pickwick Abroad, or a Tour in France" 1838, illustrated with 41 steel engravings by A Crowquill and John Phillips, and 33 woodcuts by Bonner. For Thomas Tegg, 73, Cheapside, 1839'.
In 1852, at the age of 65, he obtained an officer's position at the Greenwich Hospital, where he stayed until his death at the age of 81 in 1868. He was buried with the rank of Commander but the grave was later moved and the exact site can't be pinpointed. Pollard was married in 1822 and had six children. An 1826 book posing to be the autobiography of a French Sergeant Robert Guillemard Guillemard, Robert[pseud.
Claude Roger-Marx (12 November 1888, Paris – 17 May 1977, Paris), was a French writer, and playwright, as well as an art critic and art historian like his father Roger Marx (1859–1913).Les archives Roger Marx (1859-1913) et Claude Roger-Marx (1888-1977), de nouvelles sources pour l’étude de la critique et de l’histoire de l’art en France (French), Institut national d'histoire de l'art (INHA). He also used the pen name "Claudinet".Claudinet [Pseud.
Jadwiga Długoborska was aided by one of her tenants, Ludwik Tomaszewski pseud. “Cis”, an employee at the German magistracy and member of the Ostrów Mazowiecka District division of the Home Army (code name “Opocznik” [“Flycatcher”]). Following a denunciation from a caretaker working at the magistracy, Tomaszewski and 14 Polish clerks were arrested by the Gestapo on 20 March 1943 and taken to Pawiak prison. He died in the mass execution of a group of 280 men in Warsaw.
Agnes E. Jacomb, pseud: Agnes Elizabeth Jacomb-Hood (1866 – 1949) was an English novelist, born in London. She began her literary career by winning the 250-guinea prize in the Melrose First Novel Competition with The Faith of His Fathers: A Story of Some Idealists (1909). The novel was a commercial as well as a literary success.James Milne, "Best Novel Competition Won by a Woman With Her First Book: Some Inferences Drawn", The New York Times, April 9, 1910.
Psychoanalytic conceptions of language refers to the intersection of psychoanalytic theory with linguistics and psycholinguistics. Language has been an integral component of the psychoanalytic framework since its inception, as evidenced by the fact that Anna O. (pseud. for Bertha Pappenheim), whose treatment via the cathartic method influenced the later development of psychoanalytic therapy, referred to her method of treatment as the "talking cure" (Freud & Breuer, 1895; de Mijolla, 2005). Language is relevant to psychoanalysis in two key respects.
Daniel Robbins (Jeremiah Drummer and George Gregory Dobbs, pseud.) attended the University of Chicago as an undergraduate, receiving an A.B. in 1951 at age 19. He then attended Yale University receiving an M.A. in Art History in 1955. He had initially applied at Yale to study painting, but switched to art history when he realized the painting department was overshadowed by the painter Josef Albers. After graduating from Yale in 1955 he taught at Indiana University for one academic year (1955–1956).
Marc Jean Louis Marc-Fournier (M.), Eugène de Mirecourt (pseud. van Charles Jean Baptiste Jacquot): Madame de Tencin: drame en quatre actes, précédé de Le chevalier destouches, prologue Michel Lévy Frères, 1846 His brochure against Alexandre Dumas had inspired him to review celebrities of the time: in 1854, he began the Gallery of Contemporaries, which raised opposition from the press. Among the hundred contemporaries portrayedLes contemporains / par Eugène de Mirecourt. hathitrust.org were Hector BerliozBerlioz French National Library and George Sand.
The poet Nicasio Camilo Jover, in his poem "Miguel de Cervantes", states directly "Y la lengua del pueblo castellano / Hoy se llama la lengua de Cervantes."Glorias de España: Poesías históricas (Madrid: D.F.A. Fernel, 1848), p. 227 Spanish is called "el idioma de Cervantes" in a book published in 1830,Rafael Díaz Arenas, Memorias históricas y estadísticas de Filipinas y particularmente de la grande isla de Luzón (Manila: Diario de Manila and in another one published in 1838."El Tío Cigüeña" (pseud.
62–65; 196; n.75, 215. These six Root-Crosby songs were "O How Glad to Get Home,""Glad to Get Home" (1855), Words and Music attributed to Wurzel (G. F. R.) [pseud. for George Frederick Root, 1820–1895] from Six Songs by Wurzel, Cleveland, OH: S. Brainard’s Sons [Source: 1883-24139@LoC] "Honeysuckle Glen,""The Honeysuckle Glen" (No. 2 from Six Songs by Wurzel), The Music of George Frederick Root (1820–1895)For lyrics, see Crosby & Lowry (1899), pp. 134–35.
Joseph Eichberger (November 13, 1911 – March 20, 2009) was an American cartoonist best known for his work under the pen name Joe Lane;Catalog of Copyright Entries. Third Series: 1958: July-December, Library of Congress. Page 1139: "Eichberger, Joseph: Vale of Dears by Joe Lane, pseud." he also used the name Joseph Berger. Eichberger began his cartooning work before serving in the US Navy during World War II, using a pseudonym due to conflicts with his work as a firefighter.
Cannon says he was frustrated by The Guardians habit of cutting down his submissions and stopped writing for the paper in 1972. In addition, he cites his lack of interest in contemporary musical trends – a perspective that was reflected in his being awarded "Pseud of the Year" by the satirical magazine Private Eye for two consecutive years. Later in the 1970s, he wrote what he considers some of his "best pieces" for Melody Maker and Time Out, when they were edited by Richard Williams..
Armijn Pane, author of Kami, Perempuan Kami, Perempuan was written by Armijn Pane, a Sumatra-born journalist and man of letters. Before the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies had begun in 1942, Pane had made a name for himself in helping to establish the magazine Poedjangga Baroe in 1933 and with his novel Belenggu (Shackles; 1940). His first stage play, Lukisan Masa (Portrait of the Times), had been performed and published in May 1937. By 1942 Pane was one of the most prominent playwrights in Java, together with El Hakim (pseud.
Published in 2006, her novel Les Yeux jaunes des crocodiles (The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles) was a huge success in France, where it sold more than one million copies and received the "Prix de Maison de la Presse, 2006" for the largest distribution in France. Katherine Pancol was awarded "Best author 2007" by Gorodets Publishing (Moscow). Crocodiles was the 6th best- selling book in France in 2008 (Le Figaro littéraire). It was translated into English by William Rodarmor and "Helen Dickinson" (pseud.) and published by Penguin Books in 2013.
Irwin, Colin (1985) "Fall, By the Way: The Fall: Hip Priest and Kamerads", Melody Maker, 1 March 1985Raggett, Ned "Hip Priest and Kamerads Review", AllMusic. Retrieved 11 March 2018 The versions of "The Classical", "Fortress", and "Hip Priest" are the album versions from Hex Enduction Hour, and "Room to Live" and "Hard Life in Country" are from Room to Live. "Mere Pseud Mag. Ed." is a live version recorded in St. Gallen in 1983, and at five minutes and 42 seconds is twice as long as the album version on Hex.
Lady Owen's School, Islington, designed by George Tattersall George Tattersall (pseud. "Wildrake") (13 June 181716 August 1849) was an English sporting artist and architect. Born in Hyde Park Corner, London, he was a member of the family which operated the Tattersall's horse market, the son of Richard (III) Tattersall (1785–1859). In 1836 he compiled a guide to The Lakes of England illustrated with forty-three charming line drawings, and he showed skill as an architect by building various stables and kennels, including the Tattersall stud stables at Willesden.
They have more system operational powers than conference hosts, along with the additional social authority of selecting "featured conference" hosts and closing accounts for abuse. WELL members use a consistent login name when posting messages, and a non-fixed pseudonym field alongside it. The "pseud" (in WELL parlance) defaults to the user's real name, but can be changed at will and so often reflects a quotation from another user, or is an in-joke, or may be left blank. The user's real name can be easily looked up using their login name.
Prominent feminist writers included Mary Taylor,Beryl Hughes, "Taylor, Mary" in Dictionary of New Zealand Biography (2010) online Mary Colclough (pseud. Polly Plum),Judy Malone, "Colclough, Mary Ann" in Dictionary of New Zealand Biography (2010) online and Ellen Ellis.Aorewa McLeod, "Ellis, Ellen Elizabeth" in Dictionary of New Zealand Biography (2010) online The first signs of a politicised collective female identity came in crusades to pass the Contagious Diseases Prevention Act. Feminists by the 1880s were using the rhetoric of "white slavery" to reveal men's sexual and social oppression of women.
Abner Cole, a newspaper editor by profession, printed a parody of the Book of Mormon, the "Book of Pukei", in his Palmyra paper The Reflector in 1830. This parody described the role of "Walters the Magician" in these treasure digs, who "sacrificed a Cock for the purpose of propitiating the prince of spirits .... And he took his book, and his rusty sword, and his magic stone, and his stuffed Toad, and all his implements of witchcraft and retired to the mountains near Great Sodus Bay".Dogberry, pseud. [Cole], "Book of Pukei," The Reflector [Palmyra, New York], 1830-06-12, p. 36.
Significant elements of sado-masochism were present in some examples, perhaps reflecting the influence of the English public school, where flagellation was routinely used as a punishment.Ronald Pearsall (1969) "The Worm in the Bud: the world of Victorian sexuality", Macmillan; pp. 404–22 These clandestine works were often anonymous or written under a pseudonym, and sometimes undated, thus definite information about them often proves elusive. English erotic novels from this period include The Lustful Turk (1828); The Romance of Lust (1873); The Convent School, or Early Experiences of A Young Flagellant (1876) by Rosa Coote [pseud.
When university students staged a street demonstration in 1928 (Generation of 1928), they were arrested but were soon released. But Gómez was indeed ruthless in throttling all opposition and he allowed a personality cult, but this was as much his doing as that of his sycophants, who were numerous all over Venezuela.Rourke, Thomas (pseud.), Gomez, Tyrant of the Andes, 1936 Gómez, unlike Guzmán Blanco, never erected a statue of himself anywhere in Venezuela. He was a stickler for legal formalisms, which in essence meant that he introduced new constitutions any time it suited his political ends, although this was also the rule during the 19th century.
Tinkers and Genius: The Story of the Yankee Inventors followed in 1955; God in the White House: The Faiths of American Presidents, co-authored with David E. Green, in 1968; and Prudence Crandall: An Incident of Racism in Nineteenth-Century Connecticut in 1971. Early in his career Fuller served for eight years as editor-in-chief at Crown Publishers, where he compiled an anthology of the law in literatureAmicus Curiae (pseud.), Law in Action, New York: Crown, 1947. and large collections of quotations, anecdotes, epigrams, and, in collaboration with Hiram Haydn, book digests.1941, 1942, 1943, and 1949 respectively (Contemporary Authors v. 79-80, p. 161).
Accessed 2 February 2012.IR History: Early Days - I. Indian Railways Fan Club website. Accessed 2 February 2012. According to local Bangladeshi stories, the term Bombay duck was first coined by Robert Clive, after he tasted a piece during his conquest of Bengal. He is said to have associated the pungent smell with that of the newspapers and mail which would come into the cantonments from Bombay. The term was later popularized among the British public by its appearance in Indian restaurants in the UK. In his 1829 book of poems and "Indian reminiscences", Sir Toby Rendrag (pseudonym) notes the "use of a fish nick-named 'Bombay Duck'"Toby Rendrag (sir, pseud.), Poems, original, lyrical, and satirical, containing Indian reminiscences of the late sir Toby Rendrag, Publ.
The torque from the hoard in the Hunt Museum A Bronze Age hoard consisting of gold jewellery including a torque, bracelet, six ribbed-rings as well as a bronze rapier was discovered in Granta Fen near Stretham in 1850. Dating to between 1300 and 1000 BC, the torque is in the Hunt Museum in Limerick while the remainder of the treasure is in the British Museum.British Museum Collection Early 15th century. This sketch by Sylvanus Urban (Pseud.) from The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle 1832 Stretham means homesteadOED (2010) Homestead: "The place (town, village, etc.) in which one's dwelling is" or villageOED (2010) Village: "A collection of dwelling-houses and other buildings, forming a centre of habitation in a country district" on the road (possibly Roman); Latin strata for paved road or old English ystrad for road plus old English ham for village.
The first recorded use of the word hockey is in the 1773 book Juvenile Sports and Pastimes, to Which Are Prefixed, Memoirs of the Author: Including a New Mode of Infant Education by Richard Johnson (Pseud. Master Michel Angelo), whose chapter XI was titled "New Improvements on the Game of Hockey". The belief that hockey was mentioned in a 1363 proclamation by King Edward III of England is based on modern translations of the proclamation, which was originally in Latin and explicitly forbade the games "Pilam Manualem, Pedivam, & Bacularem: & ad Canibucam & Gallorum Pugnam". The English historian and biographer John Strype did not use the word "hockey" when he translated the proclamation in 1720, instead translating "Canibucam" as "Cambuck"; this may have referred to either an early form of hockey or a game more similar to golf or croquet.
Based on Haliburton's quote, claims were made that modern hockey was invented in Windsor, Nova Scotia, by King's College students and perhaps named after an individual ("Colonel Hockey's game"). Others claim that the origins of hockey come from games played in the area of Dartmouth and Halifax in Nova Scotia. However, several references have been found to hurling and shinty being played on the ice long before the earliest references from both Windsor and Dartmouth/Halifax, and the word "hockey" was used to designate a stick-and-ball game at least as far back as 1773, as it was mentioned in the book Juvenile Sports and Pastimes, to Which Are Prefixed, Memoirs of the Author: Including a New Mode of Infant Education by Richard Johnson (Pseud. Master Michel Angelo), whose chapter XI was titled "New Improvements on the Game of Hockey".
As a self-described pacifist and opponent of American entry into the Second World War, Macdonald in the early numbers of his magazine tracking the final year and a half of the war found much to criticize: the cynicism of Allied war aims, the bombing of civilian populations,'Gallicus' (pseud.), "Terror in the Air", politics, November 1945, pp. 338-342. the betrayal by the Russians of the Polish resistance in the wake of the crushing of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising,"Warsaw", an editorial whose grim title in Gothic script between black borders preceded its opening text on the cover of politics for October 1944, pp. 257-259. the internment of Japanese-Americans, racial segregation in the American armed forces, the sentimental belief of the "liblabs" – Macdonald's term of parodist art for the broad liberal and labor coalition across the Democratic party and the left intelligentsia – that the winning of the war would issue in the triumph of the "Common Man" and a "More Abundant Future for All" (parodic scare-capitals were among Macdonald's standard craftsman's tools), and the punitive ascription of collective guilt to civilian populations for the crimes and war policies of the governments to which they were subject.

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