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Examples
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[3] Shropshire seems to have written "seden" which means, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, the action of sowing or the state of being sown.
Letter from St. John Shropshire to Robert Carter, 1705 August 16 1705
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In seden, most pepaers are dependet on founds from the State (presstöd) therefore, they are reluctant to write something to much negative.
The Swedes Come Down Hard On The Pirate Bay Erick Schonfeld 2005
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Conscience too many of my Bretheren Have done, but I ho [[p]] e the seden will be allowed in
Letter from St. John Shropshire to Robert Carter, 1705 August 16 1705
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Just like the original CLS was a ground breaking re-invention of the typical 4-door seden, the 4-door Shooting Break concept wants to re-invent the wagon or estate category.
BenzInsider.com - A Mercedes-Benz Fan Blog Muamer Hodzic 2010
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Just like the original CLS was a ground breaking re-invention of the typical 4-door seden, the 4-door Shooting Break concept wants to re-invent the wagon or estate category.
BenzInsider.com - A Mercedes-Benz Fan Blog Muamer Hodzic 2010
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It is to be regretted that men of seden** tary employments are not sufficiently convinced of the iicooaection between the uind and body.
Treatise on the influence of climate on the human species; and on the varieties of men resulting from it; including an account of the criteria of intelligence, which the form of the head presents; and a sketch of a rational system of physiognomy as founded in physiology Pitta, Nicholas C. [from old catalog] 1812
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Bie þe Morghen i {} herde ure lord werkmen in {} to his winyarde. þo ha sente þe pat {ri} arches. ate begininge of þis wordl. ine is seruise. þet þurch gode beleauéé him seruede. and seden {230} his techi {n} ge to alle þo þet hi hedden hit to siggen.
Selections from early Middle English, 1130-1250 Part I: Texts Joseph Hall
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6 INTRODUCTION. his family with milk, an article indispensably necessary to the rearinor of healthv children; but also what more might be requisite for raising potatoes, and other vegeta - bles, cultivated at his leisure by the spade, affording an agreeable and healthful change to his confined and seden - tary occupation.
A treatise, shewing the intimate connection that subsists between agriculture and chemistry, addressed to the cultivators of the soil, to the proprietors of fens and mosses, in Great Britain and Ireland; and to the proprietors of West India estates Dundonald, Archibald Cochrane, Earl of, 1749?-1831 1795
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