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Examples

  • Walcot was a satirist whose reputation as a radical made him unable to protect his work from other publishers.

    A Brief Publication History of _Wat Tyler_ 2007

  • RF: Blogs have one hundred and one roles in British politics - everything from allowing constituents to communicate with Councillors (see Walcot Ward, for example), to running the sort of salacious gossip the media wouldn't dare/care to print (eg, Guido Fawkes), to allowing the public to comment on the words of the Prime Minister's Official Spokesperson.

    Archive 2007-01-01 Stephen Tall 2007

  • Eldon, who had come to be Lord Chief Justice of Chancery in 1801, had earlier upheld this precedent in the case of Walcot v. Walker.

    A Brief Publication History of _Wat Tyler_ 2007

  • Upon the same principle this court refused an injunction in the case of Walcot vs. Walker, inasmuch as he could not recover damages in the action.

    A Brief Publication History of _Wat Tyler_ 2007

  • While the decision against Walcot had been clearly intended to punish him for his views by depriving him of his property, Eldon's ruling on

    A Brief Publication History of _Wat Tyler_ 2007

  • In 1758 she moved to a small cottage at Walcot, just outside Bath, where she lived until her death.

    Sarah Fielding (1710-1768) 2008

  • So the only thing that Walcot is pissed off about is the fact that Palin was an unknown that has been tapped on the shoulder to become the #2 leader in the world from the realm of utter obscurity.

    3 questions about Sarah Palin the Obama supporter should not want to ask. Ann Althouse 2008

  • He was the only member of the immediate family who did not live in the family's connected properties on Walcot Street.

    Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine 2005

  • Can you come to Walcot Street between four and five?

    Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine 2005

  • Francis, Baron de Dunstanville and Basset, of Tehidy, born at Walcot in 1757, whose virtues were so greatly appreciated by the Duchy that his monument was erected on the summit of Carn Brea, where it stands as a striking landmark, rising 90 feet from its pedestal; this was placed in 1836.

    The Cornwall Coast

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