Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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"Sward," which sprouted up in the English language more than 500 years ago, is currently used more frequently as a surname than as a noun having to do with lawns and the like.
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"Sward" at one time referred to skin or rind, and especially to the rind of pork or bacon, although this meaning is now archaic.
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The so-called youth prevention campaigns that the tobacco industry runs are a farce, says Erika Sward of the American Lung Association.
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The so-called youth prevention campaigns that the tobacco industry runs are a farce, says Erika Sward of the American Lung Association.
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When I see the name Swardson, I imagine Sean Connory whispering softly in my ear with his thick brogue, his white beard gently tickling my ear, and he says, "Now your going to love the feel of my Sward son."
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The poet Robert Sward will write about that couch.
In the Fullness of Time Emily W. Upham 2010
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Of the Welding together of the Shards of the Sward Gram.
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Of the Welding together of the Shards of the Sward Gram.
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Sward 1933 found that superior socioeconomic status, as well as higher intelligence and scholastic attainment, differentiated 125 campus leaders from 125 followers.
The Bass Handbook of Leadership Bernard M. Bass 2008
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Of the Welding together of the Shards of the Sward Gram.
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