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Etymologies
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Examples
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"Rud," he said, indistinctly, as if his tongue were thick and unmanageable.
Pelle the Conqueror — Complete Martin Andersen Nex�� 1911
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"Rud," he said, indistinctly, as if his tongue were thick and unmanageable.
Pelle the Conqueror — Volume 01 Martin Andersen Nex�� 1911
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Journal_), a new canal, known as the Rud-i-Perian, was formed, and destroyed Jahanabad, Ibrahimabad and Jalalabad.
Across Coveted Lands or a Journey from Flushing (Holland) to Calcutta Overland Arnold Henry Savage Landor 1894
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Soggy, irregular and with a mound so poorly made that it looked "as if an elephant was buried there," according to Rud Rennie, who covered the Yankees for the New York Herald Tribune.
Six Weeks of Spring Training in...New Jersey? Joshua Robinson 2011
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Hopefully Rud gives this is a little more attention, because the ridiculous state of broadband here is one factor that is probably slightly dampening an economy that could be a little better than it is.
Laptop Connect Rents 3G Broadband Access | Lifehacker Australia 2009
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He returned to Czechoslovakia in 1946 as foreign editor of the Communist-controlled Rud é Pr á vo, Prague ' s best-selling daily, but time was running out.
Tinker, Tailor, Pilot, Spy Andrew Stuttaford 2010
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Afghanistan here meant the "Kabul Kingdom (including provinces/districts of Jallalabad, Kandahar, Herat, Pusht-i Rud) and Afghan Turkistan."
Connecting Histories in Afghanistan: Market Relations and State Formation on a Colonial Frontier 2008
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Hopefully Rud gives this is a little more attention, because the ridiculous state of broadband here is one factor that is probably slightly dampening an economy that could be a little better than it is.
Laptop Connect Rents 3G Broadband Access | Lifehacker Australia 2009
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The London literati were quite welcoming, but Rud did not take to people who forever discussed aesthetic principles and the state of their souls.
Who Was Kipling? 2007
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In his chapter on Thermidor in The Crowd in the French Revolution (1959), George Rud� found himself in the uncomfortable position of needing to examine the causes of the abstention, rather than of the participation, of the persons most concerned.
Introduction 2007
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