Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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The Roes were a great family of clerks at Bakewell, and the two members who occupied that office at the end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth century seem to have been endowed with good voices, and with a devoted attachment to the church and its monuments.
The Parish Clerk 1892
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David Boies had similar concerns on Charlie Roes the other.
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David Boies had similar concerns on Charlie Roes the other.
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In nearly a century of democratic skirmishing, abortion was still largely illegal prior to Roes.
Balkinization 2007
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So on the 35th anniversary of a decision that should have guaranteed women's human rights to make their own childbearing decisions without a bazillion legislators and a bunch of fundamentalist preachers weighing in, I and all women are rapidly becoming nameless and faceless Roes, the pseudonymous name used to represent a whole class of people in intrusive and volatile cases.
Gloria Feldt: I Am Roe and I Have Questions for the Candidates 2008
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The elections will determine the future for all of us Roes.
Gloria Feldt: I Am Roe and I Have Questions for the Candidates 2008
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I saw no Deere there, and but a fewe hares but a great number of Roes.
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Roes consist of separate eggs barely held together in a dilute protein solution and enclosed in a thin, fragile membrane.
On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen Harold McGee 2004
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Roes consist of separate eggs barely held together in a dilute protein solution and enclosed in a thin, fragile membrane.
On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen Harold McGee 2004
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Roes may also be fried in egg and bread crumbs; they are prepared just in the same way, only covered with egg and crumbs instead of batter.
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