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Etymologies

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Examples

  • And it was the photos that disturbed him, far more than the Govier, far more than anything he could have imagined.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • It was a Govier, painted in the late sixteenth century and given to him by a close friend, a friend who had begged him to steal its sister painting and destroy it.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • It was a Govier, painted in the late sixteenth century and given to him by a close friend, a friend who had begged him to steal its sister painting and destroy it.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • It was a Govier, painted in the late sixteenth century and given to him by a close friend, a friend who had begged him to steal its sister painting and destroy it.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • And it was the photos that disturbed him, far more than the Govier, far more than anything he could have imagined.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • He looked upon a mahogany bookcase on the side wall next to the Govier; it was filled with books and mementos, keepsakes and photos.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • And it was the photos that disturbed him, far more than the Govier, far more than anything he could have imagined.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • He looked upon a mahogany bookcase on the side wall next to the Govier; it was filled with books and mementos, keepsakes and photos.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • He looked upon a mahogany bookcase on the side wall next to the Govier; it was filled with books and mementos, keepsakes and photos.

    The Thieves of Darkness Richard Doetsch 2010

  • Informal logic tends to categorize arguments in terms of a consequent distinction between "deductive" and "inductive" arguments (a distinction that Govier [1987] aptly calls "the great divide").

    Informal Logic Groarke, Leo 2007

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