Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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The third has Tristram, Atalya and Klemente with much greater roles, and introduces Requiem and Livian.
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Both brands are subject to the recall, along with the Confient, Livian, Prizm, Renewal and Vitality lines.
Boston Scientific Issues Big Recall of Its Implantable Defibrillators Jonathan D. Rockoff 2010
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An additional connection through her father was to the illustrious Livian family, one of whose members, Marcus Livius Drusus, had been a populist hero to Italian communities clamoring for Roman citizenship in the early first century BC.4 Such a glittering pedigree marked out the young Livia as a great matrimonial asset to any aspirant to political power and a successful suitor duly presented himself in the year 43 BC.5
Caesars’ Wives Annelise Freisenbruch 2010
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Both brands are subject to the recall, along with the Confient, Livian, Prizm, Renewal and Vitality lines.
Boston Scientific Issues Big Recall of Its Implantable Defibrillators Jonathan D. Rockoff 2010
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Both brands are subject to the recall, along with the Confient, Livian, Prizm, Renewal and Vitality lines.
Boston Scientific Issues Big Recall of Its Implantable Defibrillators Jonathan D. Rockoff 2010
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He was frowning now; this statement definitely smacked of Livian snobbishness.
The Grass Crown McCullough, Colleen, 1937- 1991
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Scaurus Princeps Senatus sat back in his chair, lucent green eyes fixed upon this Livian face, with its beaky nose, dark eyes, prominent bones.
The Grass Crown McCullough, Colleen, 1937- 1991
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Its status as a Livian family heirloom is so much a fact of public record that you would be wise to cease and desist from claiming it.
The Grass Crown McCullough, Colleen, 1937- 1991
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Livian family; into the Julian, by Augustus; and both by adoption and descent, signally noble: her first marriage was with Tiberius Nero; and by him she had children: her husband, after the surrender of Perusia,
The Reign of Tiberius, Out of the First Six Annals of Tacitus; With His Account of Germany, and Life of Agricola Caius Cornelius Tacitus
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He was the son of Nero, and on both sides a branch of the Claudian House; though his mother had been ingrafted by adoptions into the Livian, and next into the Julian stock.
The Reign of Tiberius, Out of the First Six Annals of Tacitus; With His Account of Germany, and Life of Agricola Caius Cornelius Tacitus
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