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Etymologies
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Examples
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We admitted that we were and asked him where the trail went, and he said that if we kept going, it would take us all the way to Monte Cervino, which is also known as the Matterhorn.
Full Frontal Nudity Harry Hamlin 2010
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"We were seeing all the red flags…this was a disaster waiting to happen," said Davide Accomazzo of Cervino Capital in Los Angeles.
Gold Drops Below $1,700; Silver Slides 18% Tatyana Shumsky 2011
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"We're in a state of anger and shock," said Davide Accomazzo , Chief Investment Officer at Cervino Capital, which has about $5 million tied up at MF Global.
Among MF Global Customers, 'Confusion' and 'Anger' Dan Strumpf 2011
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Coated with snow on its higher, shaded faces, the fourteen-thousand-foot Matterhorn Cervino, it is called, on the Italian side looked like a gray sandcastle tilting under the assault of the tide.
The Italian Summer Roland Merullo 2009
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Coated with snow on its higher, shaded faces, the fourteen-thousand-foot Matterhorn Cervino, it is called, on the Italian side looked like a gray sandcastle tilting under the assault of the tide.
The Italian Summer Roland Merullo 2009
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Coated with snow on its higher, shaded faces, the fourteen-thousand-foot Matterhorn Cervino, it is called, on the Italian side looked like a gray sandcastle tilting under the assault of the tide.
The Italian Summer Roland Merullo 2009
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Coated with snow on its higher, shaded faces, the fourteen-thousand-foot Matterhorn Cervino, it is called, on the Italian side looked like a gray sandcastle tilting under the assault of the tide.
The Italian Summer Roland Merullo 2009
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Cervino, who was President of the Council of Trent in its initial period, extensive reports on all the important questions presented for discussion.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon 1840-1916 1913
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Cervino had always been reckoned a member, though a moderate one, of the reforming party.
The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 09 John [Editor] Rudd 1885
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Cervino, afterward Pope Marcellus II, a prelate of blameless life, was animated by those ideas of ecclesiastical reform of which Pope Paul had encouraged the open expression; but he was more especially eager for the extirpation of heresy, and not over-scrupulous in the choice of means for reaching his ends.
The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 09 John [Editor] Rudd 1885
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