Definitions

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Etymologies

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Examples

  • The apostle encamped near a well called Beder, from the name of the person who was owner of it, and had a hut made where he and Abu-Bekr sat.

    The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 04 Rossiter Johnson 1885

  • "They're trying to take advantage of economies of scale," says Eric Beder , a retail analyst with Brean Murray, Carret & Co.

    Underwear Maker Hanes Tries On Fashion Elizabeth Holmes 2011

  • Professor Sharon Beder, ( 'Working Long Hours', Engineers Australia, March 2001, p. 42) writes:

    European Productivity, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009

  • Warnaco, however, is one of very few U.S. apparel makers with the ability to sell directly into Brazil, where the economy has held up much better and the growing middle class is increasingly conscious of brands, says Eric Beder , managing director of retail at Brean, Murray, Carret & Co.

    Warnaco to Name McCluskey CEO Joann S. Lublin 2011

  • The trick, Mr. Beder says, is picking the right products and choosing the right design team.

    Underwear Maker Hanes Tries On Fashion Elizabeth Holmes 2011

  • With regard to Big Money, let me close by recommending Global Spin (Beder 2002) as a cure for acute cases of naiveté.

    Herman Daly Festschrift~ May There Be Dalyists~ Politics for a Steady State Economy 2009

  • The answer to this 'problem' was to create a throw-away consumer society see Beder for an excellent potted history, and a discussion of how consumerism is actually at odds with the Protestant work ethic.

    Fisking Thanks Patrick Vessey 2008

  • For example, both the Mesopotamian (and Hittite) hero Gilgamesh and the Anatolian storm god Teshub cry in their respective poems; so does the Canaanite epic hero Kirta (1300s B.C.); so do the Egyptian Wenamun and the Philistine prince Beder of Dor in the Egyptian tale of Wenamun (eleventh century B.C.)

    The Trojan War Barry Strauss 2006

  • For example, both the Mesopotamian (and Hittite) hero Gilgamesh and the Anatolian storm god Teshub cry in their respective poems; so does the Canaanite epic hero Kirta (1300s B.C.); so do the Egyptian Wenamun and the Philistine prince Beder of Dor in the Egyptian tale of Wenamun (eleventh century B.C.)

    The Trojan War Barry Strauss 2006

  • "This is a classic leveraged buyout," Beder told Forbes.com.

    Claire's On The Block 2006

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