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Etymologies
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Examples
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Ruter AS, the public authority that runs Oslo's metro system, says it won't try to shut down Planka directly, preferring to pursue and penalize ticketless passengers individually.
Freeloaders Unite to Fight Subway Fares Patrick McGroarty 2011
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But she adds that Ruter is preparing a new public-relations campaign against fare dodging and has increased the frequency with which it sends its employees and security contractors into the subway to check for valid tickets.
Freeloaders Unite to Fight Subway Fares Patrick McGroarty 2011
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"I don't think that is our business to deal with at all," says Gry Isberg, a Ruter spokeswoman.
Freeloaders Unite to Fight Subway Fares Patrick McGroarty 2011
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The same can't be said of the 50 or so people who turned out recently for Planka Oslo's launch party to listen to presentations on Ruter's revenue structure and the strain that automobile traffic puts on urban infrastructure while enjoying cheap beer and homemade soup.
Freeloaders Unite to Fight Subway Fares Patrick McGroarty 2011
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Following this, Ruter gives an account of the penitents seeking salvation who had to proceed step by step.
The Gospel Day Or, the Light of Christianity Charles Ebert Orr 1897
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Ruter gave two of the bishops information that such a protest was prepared and would, probably, be entered if they proceeded; and E. Hedding gave the bishop elect information of the protest against his consecration, and that, under the circumstances, it would be entered against him.
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On a morning early in May, he appeared at Duhaut's camp, with Ruter and Grollet, the French savages, and about twenty
France and England in North America; a Series of Historical Narratives — Part 3 Francis Parkman 1858
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With respect to the ruffian companions of Hiens, the conviction of Tonty that they had been put to death by the Indians may have been well founded; but the buccaneer himself is said to have been killed in a quarrel with his accomplice, Ruter, the white savage; and thus in ignominy and darkness died the last embers of the doomed colony of La Salle.
France and England in North America; a Series of Historical Narratives — Part 3 Francis Parkman 1858
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Their faces were smeared with paint, and they were wrapped in buffalo-robes like the rest; yet these seeming Indians were L'Archevêque, the tool of La Salle's murderer, Duhaut, and Grollet, the companion of the white savage, Ruter.
France and England in North America; a Series of Historical Narratives — Part 3 Francis Parkman 1858
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Ruter expressed surprise and regret when he heard of the death of his late commander.
France and England in North America; a Series of Historical Narratives — Part 3 Francis Parkman 1858
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