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Etymologies
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Examples
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In Stockholm, I visit Jacksons, Modernity and the auction house Bukowskis.
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Courtesy of Rubloff Residential Properties For now, the Bukowskis plan to relocate to Georgia on August 1 to focus on Ms. Bukowski's pursuit of a master's degree in theater and film studies at the University of Georgia.
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The Bukowskis, in loud unmodulated voices, were talking about Gemma in the TV room, their hands describing circles that had nothing to do with the subject.
Briar Rose Yolen, Jane 1991
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With the dissolution of the Austrian Empire, the Lubonskis and the Bukowskis, like other Polish officials, found no further reason to spend the better part of each year in Vienna, so the families had sold their holdings in that city, and the evening galas in Anna - gasse were no more.
Poland Michener, James 1983
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The arrival of the cabinet minister occasioned a good deal of merriment, for his name was Szymon Bukowski, and everyone joked: 'It's nice to be in your palace,' and he had fun explaining that the Bukowskis who had owned this showplace were not from his Bukowskis, but nevertheless everyone kept calling it his palace.
Poland Michener, James 1983
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'The only hope for the Ukraine,' he told his neighbors the Bukowskis, 'is a temporary alliance with Poland and Lithuania.
Poland Michener, James 1983
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But he, like the two Bukowskis, loved freedom as a tangible entity; it was good to be free, and it was good to bring freedom to others.
Poland Michener, James 1983
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But they would not accompany the Bukowskis back to Vienna; Wiktor could jolly well find himself another groom and she would look elsewhere for her language instruction.
Poland Michener, James 1983
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Bukowskis in time past had owned the Buks, had hanged them for infractions, had forced them to fight wars, and had taken everything they produced, and it Yas insufferable that now a Buk should sit here making emands.
Poland Michener, James 1983
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It had been assembled in rambling style over many centuries by the poor Bukowskis, who had been little better than peasants themselves although acknowledged as petty nobles, and in grand style by the Bukowskis of 1896, who had stumbled upon a fortune.
Poland Michener, James 1983
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