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Etymologies
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Examples
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New York Indian affairs secretary Peter Wraxall put his finger on the truth when he declared that “to preserve the balance between us and the French is the great ruling principle of modern Indian politics.”
George Washington’s First War David A. Clary 2011
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New York Indian affairs secretary Peter Wraxall put his finger on the truth when he declared that “to preserve the balance between us and the French is the great ruling principle of modern Indian politics.”
George Washington’s First War David A. Clary 2011
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New York Indian affairs secretary Peter Wraxall put his finger on the truth when he declared that “to preserve the balance between us and the French is the great ruling principle of modern Indian politics.”
George Washington’s First War David A. Clary 2011
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New York Indian affairs secretary Peter Wraxall put his finger on the truth when he declared that “to preserve the balance between us and the French is the great ruling principle of modern Indian politics.”
George Washington’s First War David A. Clary 2011
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Wraxall first DNA-matched the hair roots to the semen.
The Stocking Strangler case Rose, David 2007
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Martin filed a new motion, enclosing affidavits from Wraxall and me and asking the judge to take account of our tests.
The Stocking Strangler case Rose, David 2007
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Montgomery, whom, many years later, he welcomed as a sympathetic fellow-worker in India; and the two boys continued their education together at Wraxall in Wiltshire, to which they were transferred in
Victorian Worthies Sixteen Biographies George Henry Blore
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Wraxall had stepped so much out of his groove -- for the busy literary man that he was -- to take me by the hand, and point the way along "the perilous road"; he had given me so many kind words, that I wrote my hardest to complete my new story before I should fade wholly from his recollection.
The Idler Magazine, Volume III, March 1893 An Illustrated Monthly Various
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The book was finished in five weeks, and in hot haste, and for months again I was left wondering what the outcome of it all was to be -- whether Wraxall was reading my story, or whether -- oh, horror!
The Idler Magazine, Volume III, March 1893 An Illustrated Monthly Various
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Leigh Hunt, Wraxall and the rest made but ineffectual martyrs; the Bourbons straggled back into
Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 17, No. 098, February, 1876 Various
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