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Examples

  • There were times when we wondered if old Brusher might, perhaps, have caught all the snakes in the New Forest.

    Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009

  • There were times when we wondered if old Brusher might, perhaps, have caught all the snakes in the New Forest.

    Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009

  • The Bather/Brusher Grooming program prepares the student for employment as a bather/brusher in a professional grooming establishment.

    You’re Certifiable Joel Naftali Lee 1999

  • The Bather/Brusher Grooming program prepares the student for employment as a bather/brusher in a professional grooming establishment.

    You’re Certifiable Joel Naftali Lee 1999

  • "All right, Brusher!" laughed Gerrard, as they rode out into the cool darkness, an anxious dog-boy having extricated his charge.

    The Path to Honour Sydney C. Grier 1900

  • The Pennsylvania Academy offers three training programs: Bather/Brusher Grooming, Basic Professional All-Breed Grooming, and Master All-Breed Grooming.

    You’re Certifiable Joel Naftali Lee 1999

  • The Pennsylvania Academy offers three training programs: Bather/Brusher Grooming, Basic Professional All-Breed Grooming, and Master All-Breed Grooming.

    You’re Certifiable Joel Naftali Lee 1999

  • {71b} Brusher, a well-known character in the New Forest, Hampshire, says he has seen hundreds of snakes swallow their young in time of danger.

    Records of Woodhall Spa and Neighbourhood Historical, Anecdotal, Physiographical, and Archaeological, with Other Matter James Conway Walter

  • The relatively low snake count, at least in the adder department, came as something of a surprise after all the stories of Brusher’ Mills, the legendary New Forest snake-catcher of the late nineteenth century, who lived in the woods in a charcoal-burner’s turf-roofed lean-to of sticks and drank in the old Railway Inn at Brockenhurst.

    Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009

  • The relatively low snake count, at least in the adder department, came as something of a surprise after all the stories of Brusher’ Mills, the legendary New Forest snake-catcher of the late nineteenth century, who lived in the woods in a charcoal-burner’s turf-roofed lean-to of sticks and drank in the old Railway Inn at Brockenhurst.

    Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009

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