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Examples
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He was called Cadwallader by the frequenters of Moll's. "
All About Coffee 1909
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Owen Cadwallader, the easily bored, the numberkeeper, shoved his feet against the snow to mark it.
365 tomorrows » 2010 » May : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day 2010
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This name contains the common Brittonic name element Caed- (also spelled Cat- or Cad-), which derives from the word for ‘battle’ and occurs in the names of numerous documented Brittonic kings and princes in the seventh century, including Cadfan, Cadwallon and Cadwallader of Gwynedd (see earlier post on the Kings of Gwynedd) and Cadafael Catguommed (see earlier post on Cadafael).
Archive 2009-10-01 Carla 2009
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Stuart Cadwallader, a psychologist at the University of Warwick, will present the findings at the British Psychological Society conference in York today.
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This name contains the common Brittonic name element Caed- (also spelled Cat- or Cad-), which derives from the word for ‘battle’ and occurs in the names of numerous documented Brittonic kings and princes in the seventh century, including Cadfan, Cadwallon and Cadwallader of Gwynedd (see earlier post on the Kings of Gwynedd) and Cadafael Catguommed (see earlier post on Cadafael).
Brittonic names in ‘Anglo-Saxon’ genealogies, and vice versa Carla 2009
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One example was the work of an Anglo-American philosophe in New York, Cadwallader Colden, who wrote about Champlain in exactly the same spirit as Charlevoix.
Champlain's Dream David Hackett Fischer 2008
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One example was the work of an Anglo-American philosophe in New York, Cadwallader Colden, who wrote about Champlain in exactly the same spirit as Charlevoix.
Champlain's Dream David Hackett Fischer 2008
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In 1765, Cadwallader Colden, lieutenant governor of New York, told the Board of Trade in England that the “Gentlemen of the Law” had grown overmighty.
A History of American Law Lawrence M. Friedman 1985
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In 1765, Cadwallader Colden, lieutenant governor of New York, told the Board of Trade in England that the “Gentlemen of the Law” had grown overmighty.
A History of American Law Lawrence M. Friedman 1985
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They were here: Craig Claiborne's A Kitchen Primer, with its yellow cover art of eggs, bowl and beater Penguin edition; and the all-brown Whole Earth Cookbook, by Cadwallader and Ohr.
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