Fellow Sentence Examples

fellow
  • The fellow worker promised to dig around and telephone back.

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  • I would ask my fellow fool for a boon.

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  • I looked and saw this little fellow struggling in the water.

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  • The story was unknown to Arthur Duck, fellow of All Souls, who wrote Chicheley's life in 1617.

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  • He's just a fellow worker.

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  • Educated at Harrow, Brasenose College, Oxford, and Göttingen, he was elected fellow of Brasenose and in 1884 keeper of the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, holding this post till 1908.

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  • His father, a schoolmaster, sent him to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was elected a fellow in 1760.

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  • Indeed, her whole body is so finely organized that she seems to use it as a medium for bringing herself into closer relations with her fellow creatures.

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  • At first the Treveri resisted the appeal of Civilis and his Batavi to join the revolt, and built a defensive wall from Trier to Andernach, but soon after the two Treverans, Tutor and Classicus, led their fellow tribesmen, aided by the Lingones (Langres), in the attempt to set up a "Gallic empire."

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  • Cassie couldn't help but smile at the way Darcie described her fellow gender.

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  • I lined up behind an old fellow whose odor almost caused me to skip the meal entirely but I stuck with it and was rewarded by a tasty bowl of chicken soup and a fresh baked roll.

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  • In 1576 he had been elected fellow of Pembroke.

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  • A man got up and came to see what this queer big fellow was laughing at all by himself.

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  • Beside Denisov rode an esaul, * Denisov's fellow worker, also in felt cloak and sheepskin cap, and riding a large sleek Don horse.

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  • A poor little fellow, Denisov repeated.

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  • John's College, Cambridge, of which he was afterwards elected fellow.

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  • Let me kiss you, dear old fellow!

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  • In 1885 he was elected honorary fellow of Exeter College, Oxford.

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  • Amongst his fellow lecturers were Moses Amyraut and Josue de la Place.

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  • That he left an unfavourable opinion among his fellow citizens is very decidedly recorded by the historian Varchi.

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  • He was elected fellow of King's College, Cambridge, in 1839, and took orders in 1842.

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  • In 1766 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • In 1862 he was made a fellow of the Royal Society, and in 1865 a member of the Mathematical Society of London.

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  • He was elected honorary fellow of St John's in 1874, having resigned his fellowship on his marriage in 1864.

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  • In 1476 a poor young shepherd drew thousands to Nicklashausen to hear him denounce the emperor as a rascal and the pope as a worthless fellow, and urge the division of the Church's property among the members of the community.

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  • In January 1837 he was elected fellow of University College.

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  • He took orders in 1747, and was elected fellow of Queens' College, Cambridge, in 1749.

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  • From this point the work was carried on by Philistus's fellow countryman Athanas.

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  • But while literary in form and conception, its appeal is in spirit so personal a testimony to what the Gospel has done for the writer and his fellow Christians, that it is akin to the piety of the Apostolic Fathers as a group. It is true that it has marked affinities, e.g.

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  • As a fellow of Magdalen College, he had been desirous of changes which he felt himself bound by his oath from advocating; and he had taken part in the discussions on the abolition of tests in the old universities.'

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  • He obtained a scholarship at Trinity College, Oxford, and a second class in the degree examination, and was elected fellow of his college (1845).

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  • The Czartoryscy, of all men, were bound by their principles and professions to set their fellow citizens an example of fraternal concord.

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  • In 1820 he was sent to the university of Warsaw, where he had Goszczynski as a fellow student.

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  • Elected a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1866, he became honorary secretary in 1872, and contributed eighty-three separate papers to its Monthly Notices.

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  • After being at school at Ashford, Tenterden and Felsted, and being instructed in Latin, Greek and Hebrew, he was in 1632 sent to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and afterwards was chosen fellow of Queens' College.

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  • In 1878 he was elected president of the British Association, and in the same year president of the Royal Society, of which he had been a fellow since 1853.

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  • He was a fellow of the Royal, Linnean and Geological Societies.

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  • He was admitted to the Middle Temple in February 1637, and in May be became a fellow commoner of Balliol College, Oxford.

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  • Three hundred thus separated from Rapp in 1833, with $105,000 as their share of the communal property, to build the millennial kingdom of New Jerusalem at Phillipsburg (now Monaca), Beaver county, Pennsylvania, under the lead of Bernhard Muller, who had come to Economy in 1831 as a fellow religionist, and was called Count Maximilian de Leon (or Proli); in 1833 Leon went, with his followers, to Louisiana, and established a religious colony 6 m.

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  • He became a fellow of his college, and at some date subsequent to 1571 left Oxford to become master of a school at Sandwich, Kent, where he died in 1610.

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  • In 1834 Dr Chalmers was elected fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and in the same year he became corresponding member of the Institute of France; in 1835 Oxford conferred on him the degree of D.C.L.

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  • Edward Wright, who was a fellow of Caius College, Cambridge, occupies a conspicuous place in the history of navigation.

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  • In 1828 he was elected fellow of Oriel; and after a few years there as a tutor, during which he was ordained and acted as curate at Cuddesdon, he became rector of Broadwindsor, Dorset (1838).

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  • He attended some of the divinity classes at the university, where also he formed a lasting friendship with two of his fellow students, well known afterwards as Professor Duncan and Dr Chalmers.

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  • A paper which he communicated to the Royal Society on "Experimental Researches on the Strength of Pillars of Cast Iron and other Materials," in 1840 gained him a Royal medal in 1841, and he was also elected a fellow.

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  • In April 1547 he took chambers in the Inner Temple, and began to study law; but finding divinity more congenial, he removed, in the following year, to St Catharine's Hall, Cambridge, where he studied with such assiduity that in little more than a year he was admitted by special grace to the degree of master of arts, and was soon after made fellow of Pembroke Hall, the fellowship being "worth seven pound a year."

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  • He had a distinguished university career at Edinburgh, and Balliol College, Oxford, and after being fellow of Jesus and tutor of Balliol was elected professor of logic and metaphysics at St Andrews.

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  • He became a fellow of the Royal Society in 1837; in 1847 he married; and in 1868, after the completion of his masterpiece, the automatic telegraph, he was knighted.

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  • In 1787 he became pastor of a Baptist church in Leicester, and began those energetic movements among his fellow religionists which resulted in the formation of the Baptist Missionary Society, Carey himself being one of the first to go abroad.

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  • He entered the university of Oxford about 1525, and was elected fellow of All Souls' College in 1531.

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  • He became a fellow in 1707.

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  • In 1868 he became a fellow of St.

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  • Having remained abroad nearly a year, he returned to Cambridge, and was elected a fellow of Trinity College, then first erected by King Henry VIII.

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  • He was made honorary fellow of Corpus Christi, and occupied rooms in the college.

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  • Hooke, he was chosen a fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • He graduated in 1657, and was chosen fellow in 1659.

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  • In 1890 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Aberdeen gave him its honorary LL.D., and in 1899 he was appointed Gifford lecturer by that university, but declined on grounds of health.

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  • In 1832 he was 34th wrangler and 8th classic, and in 1834 was made fellow of Trinity.

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  • He was president of the British Association in 1904, and became a fellow of the Royal Society in 1888.

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  • The chancellor never realized the gravity of the onslaught which, with his Kulturkampf, he was making upon the conscience and liberty of his Catholic fellow citizens.

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  • At first he went to Jena, but Zinzendorf at once sought to secure him as a fellow labourer, though the count wished to obtain from him a declaration which would remove from the Pietists of Halle all blame with regard to the disruption.

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  • In the same year he was elected a fellow of Trinity College, and became second Smith's prizeman.

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  • He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1884, became president of the Cambridge Philosophical Society in 1894, president of Section A of the British Association in 1896, and president of the Royal Society in 1915.

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  • He was the recipient of many British and foreign awards and honours, amongst these being the Royal and Hughes medals of the Royal Society in 1894 and 1902 respectively, the Hodgkins medal of the Smithsonian Institute of Washington in 1902, the Nobel Prize for physics in 1906, enrolment as honorary graduate of many universities, and as honorary fellow of numerous American and continental scientific academies.

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  • Jurieu defended the doctrines of Protestantism with great ability against the attacks of Antoine Arnauld, Pierre Nicole and Bossuet, but was equally ready to enter into dispute with his fellow Protestant divines (with Louis Du Moulin and Claude Payon, for instance) when their opinions differed from his own even on minor matters.

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  • He withdrew subsequently with a number of fellow disciples to Megara, and it has been conjectured, though there is no direct evidence, that this was the period of Plato's residence in Megara, of which indications appear in the Theaetetus.

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  • On the following day, along with a number of fellow martyrs, he was exposed to the fury of wild beasts, which, however, laid themselves down in tame submission at his feet.

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  • Foremost in this work were William Ellis and John Williams (q.v.), who formed a native agency to carry the gospel to their fellow islanders, and so inaugurated what has since been a characteristic feature of South Sea Missions.

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  • In 1654 he was sent by his uncle to Trinity College, Dublin, of which he subsequently became scholar and fellow.

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  • Benjamin Wills Newton, head of the community there, who had been a fellow of Exeter College, Oxford, was accused of departing from the testimony of the Brethren by reintroducing the spirit of clericalism.

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  • In July 1662 he was elected professor of geometry in Gresham College, on the recommendation of Dr John Wilkins, master of Trinity College and afterwards bishop of Chester; and in May 1663 he was chosen a fellow of the Royal Society, at the first election made by the council after obtaining their charter.

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  • Upon quitting his professorship Barrow was only a fellow of Trinity College; but his uncle gave him a small sinecure in Wtles, and Dr Seth Ward, bishop of Salisbury, conferred upon him a prebend in that church.

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  • To his fellow workers he was uniformly generous, free from jealousy, and prodigal of praise.

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  • He was educated at Eton and at King's College, Cambridge, of which he became fellow and tutor, graduating fourth in the classical tripos of 1860.

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  • Educated at Helensburgh, Glasgow University and Trinity College, Cambridge, he was elected fellow of his college in 1879 and was called to the bar.

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  • He took his degree in 1886, becoming fellow of All Souls in 1888.

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  • He was fellow and dean of divinity at Magdalen College, Oxford, from 1893 to 1896, and at the same time vicar of the university church of St.

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  • In May 1555 he became a fellow of Peterhouse.

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  • He entered as a pensioner of Clare Hall, Cambridge, in 1647, graduated in 1650 and was made fellow of his college in 1651.

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  • In 1748 he published some Remarks on an Enquiry into the Rejection of Christian Miracles by the Heathens (1746), by William Weston, a fellow of St John's College, Cambridge.

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  • In 1784 he was sent to Cambridge, where he was ninth wrangler, and became fellow of his college (Jesus) in 17 9 7.

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  • He was educated at the City of London school and at St John's College, Cambridge, where he took the highest honours in the classical, mathematical and theological triposes, and became fellow of his college.

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  • In 1687 he became fellow of the College of Physicians, and proceeded to Jamaica the same year as physician in the suite of the duke of Albemarle.

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  • Lincoln was very popular among his fellow legislators, and in 1838 and in 1840 he received the complimentary vote of his minority colleagues for the speakership of the state House of Representatives.

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  • German culture, after a short revival, perished once more amid the smoke of the fires kindled by Conrad of Marburg and his fellow inquisitors.

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  • In the same year he became tutor and fellow of Merton.

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  • Ray was chosen minor fellow of Trinity in 1649, and in due course became a major fellow on proceeding to the master's degree.

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  • In 1667 Ray was elected a fellow of the Royal Society, and in 1669 he published in conjunction with Willughby his first paper in the Philosophical Transactions on "Experiments concerning the Motion of Sap in Trees."

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  • At Clermont Conti had been a fellow student of Moliere's for whom he secured an introduction to the court of Louis XIV., but afterwards, when writing a treatise against the stage entitled Traite de la comedic et des spectacles scion les traditions de l'Eglise (Paris, 1667), he charged the dramatist with keeping a school of atheism.

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  • He became a fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1795, took orders in 1802, and was select university preacher in 1804.

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  • At Cambridge, Leonard Courtney was second wrangler and first Smith's prizeman, and was elected a fellow of his college, St John's.

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  • Lord Broughton was a partner in Whitbread's brewery, a fellow of the Royal Society, and one of the founders of the Royal Geographical Society.

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  • He carried the humour and sub-acidity of discrimination which marked his criticism of fellow folk-lorists into the discussion of purely literary subjects in his Books and Bookmen (1886), Letters to Dead Authors (1886), Letters on Literature (1889), &c. His Blue Fairy Tale Book (1889), beautifully produced and illustrated, was followed annually at Christmas by a book of fairy tales and romances drawn from many sources.

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  • After studying law for six years, he became a fellow at St John's College, Cambridge, in 1564.

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  • He came of a middle-class Yorkshire family of pronounced Liberal and Nonconformist views, and was educated under Dr Edwin Abbott at the City of London school, from which he went as a scholar to Balliol, Oxford; there he had a distinguished career, taking a first-class in classics, winning the Craven scholarship and being elected a fellow of his college.

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  • He was a fellow of the British Academy and a member of the Royal Commission on Ancient Monuments, England; he was also first president of the Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies.

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  • Through the tuition of the local Protestant clergyman, who was interested in the boy, he got a scholarship in 1756 at Trinity College, Dublin, and subsequently became a fellow.

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  • Educated at the City of London School, he obtained a studentship at King's College, London, and in 1856 a scholarship at Queen's College, Cambridge, graduated as fifth wrangler in 185 9, and was immediately elected fellow of his college.

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  • Subsequently he became a fellow and a tutor of the college, and in 1776 was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London.

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  • By a second marriage, undeniably legal, Robert had a family whose claims were not permitted to give trouble at his accession, though the earl of Douglas, the fellow conspirator of David II., would have caused difficulties if he had possessed the power.

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  • After obtaining the Ireland scholarship and Newdigate prize for an English poem (The Gypsies), he was in 1839 elected fellow of University College, and in the same year took orders.

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  • In 1870 he became a fellow of the Chemical Society, and in 1872 graduated D.Sc. of London in electrical science.

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  • He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1904 and died at Shortlands, Kent, Dec. 13 1920.

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  • He was also a fellow of Brasenose College, honorary fellow of Exeter, a fellow of the British Academy and of other learned societies, and a governor of Harrow School.

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  • He was educated at Cambridge, where he was a fellow of Trinity Hall, and in 1537, president of Queen's College.

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  • He was elected a fellow of Eton in 1817, and in 1818 the college presented him to the living of Maple Durham, Oxfordshire.

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  • He threw his keen intellect and trenchant style into the cause of university reform, the leading champion of which was another fellow of University College, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley.

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  • At Cambridge in 1774 Fellow Commoners were examined with such precipitation to fulfil the formal requirements of the statutes that the ceremony was termed " huddling for a degree " (Jebb, Remarks upon the Present Mode of Education in the University of Cambridge, 4th ed., 1 774, p. 32).

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  • In 1759 he leased the Ivy House pottery in Burslem from some relatives, and like a sensible man he continued to make only such pottery as was being made at the period by his fellow - manufacturers.

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  • He was educated at St John's College, Cambridge, where he became a fellow in 1529.

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  • He gained a first class in jurisprudence in 1895 and was Vinerian Law Scholar in 1896, was elected a Fellow of Merton and did a considerable amount of educational work in the next few years, being a lecturer both at Merton and at Oriel, and an extension lecturer in modern history both for Oxford and for Victoria University.

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  • Luther's friends had been provokingly silent about the Theses; but in April 1518, at the annual chapter of the Augustinian Eremites held at Heidelberg, Luther heard his positions temperately discussed, and found somewhat to his astonishment that his views were not acceptable to all his fellow monks.

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  • As usual he wrote out and published an account of the Disputation, which was an appeal to his fellow Germans.

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  • From 1876 almost until his death he was connected with the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, being in turn a fellow, an associate in history (1878-1883), an associate professor (1883-1891) and after 1891 professor of American and institutional history.

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  • To the minority of strict Jews he was therefore " the abomination of desolation standing where he ought not "; but the majority he carried with him and, when he was dying (165 B.C.) during his eastern campaigns, he wrote to the loyal Jews as their fellow citizen and general, exhorting them to preserve their present goodwill towards him and his son, on the ground that his son would continue his policy in gentleness and kindness, and so maintain friendly relations with them (2 Macc. ix.).

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  • In 1728 he visited London, and was elected a fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • A scholar of University College, Oxford, he graduated with a' double-first class in 1844, and in the same year he was elected fellow of Brasenose College.

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  • He won an open scholarship, took his degree with a first-class in literis humanioribus (1833), and became fellow and tutor of Balliol; he was also ordained deacon (1836) and priest (1838), and served the curacy of Baldon.

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  • Their social tendencies are distinctly communistic; property is often owned by the family in common, and a man can call upon the services of his fellow villagers for certain purposes, as the building of a house.

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  • He graduated at Columbia College in 1882, was a graduate fellow in philosophy there from 1882 to 1884, when he took the degree of Ph.

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  • The king, who is said to have described him as a brave fellow who had no head, promoted him to the rank of brigadier, and then major-general with some reluctance.

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  • He returned to England in November 1678, having by the registration of 341 stars won the title of the "Southern Tycho," and by the translation to the heavens of the "Royal Oak," earned a degree of master of arts, conferred at Oxford by the king's command on the 3rd of December 1678, almost simultaneously with his election as fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • He was not a fellow of the Royal Society, but must certainly have known of the gift of the Copley medal to Dollond.

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  • He died suddenly of apoplexy on the 13th of March 1845, in London, while attending a meeting of the council of the Royal Society, of which he became a fellow in 1813 and foreign secretary in 1839.

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  • In 1850 Hort took his degree, being third in the classical tripos, and in 1852 he became fellow of his college.

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  • He was educated at Harrow and at Balliol College, Oxford, and was elected fellow of Trinity College in 1875.

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  • In May 1755 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London, and published several papers on electrical subjects in the Phil.

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  • Her son, spoiled by his mother and his step-father, became a wild young fellow, and added his debts to the heavy burden of Montpelier upon Madison.

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  • As regards the first object the mere fact of joining the society and becoming an "initiated fellow" was supposed to involve a certain kind of intellectual and social brotherhood, though not implying anything in the nature of an economic union.

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  • This latter aspect of the fraternity was to be satisfied by the contribution from each fellow of five dollars by way of initiation fee.

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  • He was educated at Eton and at Magdalen College, Oxford, becoming demy or scholar in 1619, and fellow in 1625.

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  • In 1734 he became a fellow of his college, and in the following year obtained his degree of B.A.

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  • Some places, such as Bidi in Sarawak, for instance, are notoriously unhealthy; but from the statistics of the Dutch government, and the records of Sarawak and British North Borneo, it would appear that the European in Borneo has in general not appreciably more to fear than his fellow in Java, or in the Federated Malay States of the Malayan Peninsula.

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  • Serious disturbances among the Chinese are now in Borneo matters of ancient history, and to-day the Chinaman forms perhaps the most valuable element in the civilization and development of the island, just as does his fellow in the mining states of the Malayan Peninsula.

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  • The existence of these lakedwellings in Scotland was first made known by John Mackinlay, a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, in a letter sent to George Chalmers, the author of Caledonia, in 1813, describing two crannogs, or fortified islands in Bute.

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  • He graduated in 1763 as senior wrangler, became fellow in 1766, and in 1768 tutor of his college.

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  • Oriel College was, at the time when Keble became a fellow, the centre of all the finest ability in Oxford.

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  • Cudworth was sent to his father's college, was elected fellow in 1639, and became a successful tutor.

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  • In 1735 he became a member of the Society of Antiquaries, and was elected a fellow of the Royal Society, of which he was secretary from 1752 to 1765.

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  • Fermanagh, and educated at Trinity College, Dublin, where he was elected fellow in 1788.

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  • Magee was appointed professor of mathematics and senior fellow of Trinity in 1800, but in 1812 he resigned, and undertook the charge of the livings of Cappagh, Co.

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  • The fact was that Saint-Mars was hard put to it in the prison for anybody who could be trusted, and that he had convinced himself by this time that Dauger (who had proved a quiet harmless fellow) would give no trouble.

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  • Horsley was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1767; and secretary in 1773, but, in consequence of a difference with the president (Sir Joseph Banks) he withdrew in 1784.

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  • In 1690 he became a member of the Corporation (probably the youngest ever chosen as Fellow) of Harvard College, and in 1707 he was greatly disappointed at his failure to be chosen president of that institution.

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  • This action, which really broke the back of the rebellion, was bitterly denounced by some of his fellow conspirators, who even ascribed their misfortunes to his insane belief in his own superhuman powers.

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  • From 1870 he was a fellow, and from 1875 also a tutor, of New College, and in 1883 succeeded Pusey as regius professor of Hebrew and canon of Christ Church.

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  • He was a member of the Old Testament Revision Committee (1876-1884) and examining chaplain to the bishop of Southwell (1884-1904); received the honorary degrees of doctor of literature of Dublin (1892),(1892), doctor of divinity of Glasgow (1901), doctor of literature of Cambridge (1905); and was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1902.

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  • Glenelg's brother, SIR Robert Grant (1779-1838), who was third wrangler in 1801, was, like his brother, a fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge, and a barrister.

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  • He was a fellow of his college, and was appointed Woodwardian professor of geology in 1762, and in 1767 rector of Thornhill in Yorkshire, where he died on the 29th of April 1793.

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  • He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in the same year as Henry Cavendish (1760).

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  • Elected a fellow of his college, he devoted himself to teaching, and quickly proved himself one of the most successful mathematical "coaches" ever known at Cambridge.

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  • William Frend, a fellow of Jesus, accused of sedition and Unitarianism, was at this time tried and expelled from Cambridge.

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  • Having become senior moderator in mathematics and a fellow of Trinity, he took holy orders, and was appointed regius professor of divinity in Dublin University in 1866, a position which he retained until 1888, when he was chosen provost of Trinity College.

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  • As a mathematician Salmon was a fellow of the Royal Society, and was president of the mathematical and physical section of the British Association in 1878.

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  • Driven inwards upon themselves, they employed their energy in severe self-examination, or they cultivated resignation to the will of the universe, and towards their fellow men forbearance and forgiveness and humility, the virtues of the philanthropic disposition.

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  • He studied mathematics, civil and military architecture, and astronomy, and became associate of the Academie des Sciences, professor of geometry, secretary to the Academy of Architecture and fellow of the Royal Society of London.

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  • In 1649 he obtained the degree of doctor of physic, and was soon after elected a fellow of Brasenose College.

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  • In 1747 he was elected fellow of Exeter College, and in 1750 he took his degree of M.A.

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  • In 1764 he was made a fellow of the Royal Society, and in 1767 keeper of the Radcliffe Library.

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  • In the years 1815-1817 he contributed three papers on the "Calculus of Functions" to the Philosophical Transactions, and in 1816 was made a fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • Still less has Livy anything in common with the naïve anxiety of Dionysius of Halicarnassus to make it clear to his fellow Greeks that the irresistible people who had mastered them was in origin, in race and in language Hellenic like themselves.

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  • From the Royal Society, of which he was elected a fellow in 1860, he received a royal medal in 1886 and the Darwin medal in 1902, and honorary degrees were bestowed on him by Oxford (1894) and Cambridge (1895).

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  • He was educated at a private school in his native town, at King's College, London, and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was elected fellow in 1868, after being second wrangler in 1867 and second Smith's prizeman.

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  • In 1871 he was appointed professor of mathematics at University College, London, and in 1874 became fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • In 1826 he was chosen fellow of Oriel and was ordained, among his friends and colleagues being Newman, Pusey and Keble.

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  • In November of that year the Royal Society, of which he had become a fellow in 1803, and acted as secretary from 1807 to 1812, chose him as their president, but his personal qualities were not such as to make him very successful in that office, especially in comparison with the tact and firmness of his predecessor, Sir Joseph Banks.

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  • In 1842, also, he was elected a fellow of Trinity, and became a major fellow in 1845, the year in which he proceeded to the M.A.

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  • He was fellow or foreign corresponding member of the French Institute, the academies of Berlin, Göttingen, St Petersburg, Milan, Rome, Leiden, Upsala and Hungary; and he was nominated an officer of the Legion of Honour by President Carnot.

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  • He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1852, and received from that body a Royal medal in 1859 and the Copley medal in 1882.

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  • Discontent became rife, and on the ship breaking out of the ice in the spring Henry Hudson had a violent quarrel with a dissolute young fellow named Henry Greene, whom he had befriended by taking him on board, and who now retaliated by inciting the discontented part of the crew to put Hudson and eight others (including the sick men) out of the ship. This happened on the 22nd of June 1611.

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  • In the same year he became a fellow of the Royal Society, and, in 1718, joined in the establishment of the Society of Antiquaries, acting for nine years as its secretary.

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  • In November 1804 he was elected a fellow of All Souls College; and, after finishing his distinguished university career, he made a long tour in Europe.

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  • He was elected fellow of Queen's and ordained in 1542; subsequently he was elected student of Christ Church.

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  • At the age of nineteen, he was articled for five years as clerk to the master of a school in Spital Square, London, with whom at the end of that time he entered into partnership. In 1750 he read a paper before the Royal Society on a method of making artificial magnets, which procured him election as a fellow of the society and the award of the Copley medal.

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  • It was probably owing to Dr. Hyde's influence with his fellow commissioners that Trinity College, following their recommendations, established a moderatorship and gold medal in Celtic studies.

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  • Anne; and the same year he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • In 1872 he introduced in the Senate a resolution providing that the names of battles with fellow citizens should not be placed on the regimental colours of the United States.

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  • He had organized the Springfield Presbytery, but in 1804 with his five fellow ministers signed "The Last Will and Testament of the Springfield Presbytery," giving up that name and calling themselves "Christians."

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  • His early observations were made at the rectory of Wanstead in Essex, under the tutelage of his uncle, the Rev. James Pound (1669-1724), himself a skilled astronomer, and he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society on the 6th of November 1718.

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  • He was educated at Eton and at Wadham College, Oxford, of which he became a fellow in 1833.

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  • White, his fellow member of the state senate, decided to found a university of a new type - which should be broad and liberal in its scope, should be absolutely nonsectarian, and which should recognize and meet the growing need for practical training and adequate instruction in the sciences as well as in the humanities.

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  • He was elected a fellow of his college on the 1st of October 1667.

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  • In a subsequent letter on the 10th of August, Barrow expressed his pleasure at hearing the favourable opinion which Collins had formed of the paper, and added, " the name of the author is Newton, a fellow of our college, and a young man, who is only in his second year since he took the degree of master of arts, and who, with an unparalleled genius (eximio quo est acumine), has made very great progress in this branch of mathematics."

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  • On the 21st of December 1671 he was proposed as a candidate for admission into the Royal Society by Dr Seth Ward, bishop of Salisbury, and on the 11th of January 1672 he was elected a fellow of the Society.

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  • He had his information from Newton's favourite niece Catharine Barton, who married Conduitt, a fellow of the Royal Society, and one of Newton's intimate friends.

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  • Charles Montague, who was afterwards earl of Halifax, was a fellow of Trinity College, and was a very intimate friend of Newton; and it was on his influence that Newton relied in the main for promotion to some post of honour and emolument.

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  • As president Newton was brought into close connexion with Prince George of Denmark, the queen's husband, who had been elected a fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • In the middle of 1708 Newton's consent was obtained, but it was not till the spring of 1709 that he was prevailed upon to entrust the superintendence of it to a young mathematician of great promise, Roger Cotes, fellow of Trinity College, who had been recently appointed the first Plumian professor of astronomy and experimental philosophy.

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  • He himself published the fruit of his studies and travels in a voluminous collection of notebooks, in which he showed a lively eye for the oddities of his fellow kings.

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  • In 1872 he had been given the honorary degree of doctor of philosophy by Munich University; in 1888 Cambridge gave him the honorary degree of LL.D., and in 1889 Oxford the D.C.L.; and in 1890 he was made a fellow of All Souls.

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  • Elected fellow of his college in 1843, he at once proceeded to attack the novel problem.

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  • Through the influence of Clift he was elected a fellow of the Geological Society early in 1834.

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  • He was second wrangler in 1816, became fellow and tutor of his college, and, in 1841, succeeded Dr Wordsworth as master.

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  • A monastery was subsequently added, and around it the present town of St Albans gradually grew up. Pope Adrian IV., who was born in the neighbourhood, conferred on the abbot of St Alban's the right of precedence over his fellow abbots, a right hitherto attached to the abbey of Glastonbury.

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  • During his stay in England he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society.

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  • His worst enemies were always his fellow Mahommedans.

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  • He was educated at Norwich grammar school and at Caius College, Cambridge, where he was scholar and afterwards fellow.

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  • His younger brother, Arthur Sidgwick, had a brilliant school and university career, being second classic at Cambridge in 1863 and becoming fellow of Trinity; but he devoted himself thenceforth mainly to work as a teacher.

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  • After being for many years a master at Rugby, he became in 1882 fellow and tutor of Corpus, Oxford; and from 1894 to 1906 was Reader in Greek in the university.

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  • He became a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1867, and acted as president of the anthropological section of the British Association in 1882 and of the geological section in 1888.

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  • In 1778 he was elected a fellow of the Antiquarian Society, and a fellow of the Royal Society in 1779.

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  • He was elected fellow of Corpus Christi College in 1620; in 1633 he became chaplain to Archbishop Laud and in 1634 master of Jesus College, Cambridge, and rector of Yelverton, Somerset.

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  • He was also a fellow of at least fifteen learned societies in Holland, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Great Britain and the United States.

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  • He was adopted by his godfather, Edward Hearst, and his wife, and was sent to Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1689, was demy of his college from 1689 to 1701 and fellow from 1701 to 1713.

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  • He was a fellow of the Royal Society, a writer on varied topics to the reviews and the author of the hymn "Lord of our Life and God of our Salvation."

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  • The pecuniary rewards of Bessemer's great invention came to him with comparative quickness; but it was not till 1879 that the Royal Society admitted him as a fellow and the government honoured him with a knighthood.

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  • Upon his recovery he removed to Huntingdon in order to be near his brother John, who was a fellow of St Benet's College, Cambridge.

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  • He took his bachelor's degree in 1635, his master's degree in 1639, and immediately afterwards was chosen fellow of his college.

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  • The last section of this tube retains its connexion with the ventral portion of the somite, and so acquires an external opening, which is at first lateral, but soon shifts to the middle line, and fuses with its fellow, to form the single generative opening.

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  • The eldest, Thomas, retired from trade to devote himself to natural and physical science, and contributed many papers to the Royal Society, of which he was a fellow.

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  • He became a fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and after a short scholastic career in Ireland he accepted an appointment.

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  • You chose a human and serving the White God over the immortal realm at the Schism, despite the need for your power by your fellow immortals.

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  • Fellow detectives Tom DeLeo and Andy Sackler, seated across the room, were arguing as usual while the only other occupant, newcomer Detective Lenny Harrigan, was either catching a quick nap or meditating.

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  • Run down this missing fellow Brunell too, Fred said, a hopeful look in his eye.

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  • If you care about your fellow human being, you'll get a real buzz from solving patients' problems.

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  • And was attended by some 200 people, including fellow academics, and local teachers.

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  • He tried to keep up with the news from the Academy of Sciences of Lisbon and from his fellow academicians and naturalists.

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  • Marion is a retired accountant, having worked in local government and industry, and a fellow of the Chartered Society of Management Accountants.

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  • I am understudying the adjutant at present with another fellow, in case he gets pipped.

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  • People who use the welfare system in this way allegedly take unfair advantage of their fellow citizens.

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  • They will be joined from every continent, particularly America, by fellow golf aficionados.

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  • You can also stay in touch with fellow alumnae through the Alumnae Association Message Board.

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  • Astronomer's asteroid Dr. Ann Gower, former Fellow of New Hall, has been honored by having an asteroid named after her.

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  • The real surprise is when they talk to fellow atheists and find out that others often think very similar things.

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  • Which then made me wonder if such things occur in club athletics among our fellow amateur athletes.

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  • Geoff Lake began his story when a fellow attendee that evening mentioned Langley's name.

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  • Unlike many of his fellow actors, Wood spoke normally and without any strange emphases, and yet was still perfectly audible.

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  • The man's stance suggests that he is engaged in a slapstick comedy routine, kicking the backside of the hapless fellow in front.

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  • John Ratzenberger - ' Cliff Clavin ' Cliff is Norm's partner in crime and fellow barfly.

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  • This inner wisdom activates your capacity to express benevolence for your fellow humans without regard for what is in it for you.

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  • They were both in work, and if plaintiff would only bide her time some other young fellow would come along and marry her.

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  • Larry up to his waste in water trying to save his fellow bikers.

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  • Corrie, I fear that you are a very bloodthirsty fellow.

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  • We enjoyed a walk around town and a chat with fellow boaters.

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  • Let's see... oh, yes, there's also Owen Custer, a fellow bounty hunter.

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  • He was a delicate, frail-looking little fellow, dressed in a black velvet suit with knee breeches.

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  • In the 4th we came up against some fellow brits.

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  • The operators would of his fellow grand Californian is geological survey set.

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  • This excellent family tent will certainly attract attention from fellow campers.

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  • His description of the courage and despair of his fellow captives is very compelling.

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  • The silence, the virtual absence of many of Tyson's fellow castaways I found suggestive and eloquent.

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  • It was at Cambridge that Armitage found his talent for writing catchy, jolly tunes that were popular with his fellow undergraduates.

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  • But as scantily-clad groupies guzzled champagne, fellow band Kobai hit the sauce and left the swanky suite coated in the sticky mess.

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  • A hard-earned draw against their fellow promotion chasers Torquay means the Swans have still taken only nine points from their last nine matches.

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  • Being a fellow cheapskate, I just have to agree.

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  • They are designed to liberate the talents of millions of our fellow citizens who are not properly supported by the present rules.

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  • Just from talking to fellow clarets it doesn't sound like there has been a massive take up of Clarets World.

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  • Students will have an opportunity to rehearse with their fellow classmates.

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  • But now in Ron Powers's holistic Twain book we see the parts finally coalesce into the whole fascinating fellow.

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  • Meanwhile, fellow Aussie Adam Shields overcame a badly broken collarbone to end the season on a 7.01 average.

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  • Gerz, who is a Senior Research Fellow at Coventry University, will be hosting a colloquium on Friday 23 May at 13.30.

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  • At one of these sales he meets a fellow enthusiast who years later is to find success in underground comics.

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  • Mr Maurice Scarr, our oldest fellow commoner, sadly lost his wife Mabel in November.

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  • May your memories live on forever my fellow commuters.

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  • They are places to enjoy the companionship of fellow passengers.

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  • And the gold rush continued as the baton was handed over to her fellow Welsh compatriots at the IPC Belgian European Trials.

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  • To partly compensate we seconded a Japanese research fellow from Kawasaki within our research team meetings.

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    0
  • Unlike his fellow conspirators, Surratt obtained a civil rather than a military trial.

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    0
  • In an effort to gain some male support she even had a brief snog with fellow girl contestant Tania.

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  • He then sold his share in the syndicate to a fellow councilor.

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  • It was the name of the fellow with the swarthy countenance.

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    0
  • Not for the first time in recent events he will be playing fellow countryman James Willstrop in a crucial match.

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  • In the second-string department, highly-rated Swede Sebastian Alden fills one position, with the other taken by fellow countryman Davidsson.

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  • Seven British children even study in the local school, and a fellow countrywoman of theirs teaches Bulgarians English there.

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  • Would you believe a fellow co-worker tried to run me over!

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  • Next time you feel like your lip curling into a sneer - have a little care for your fellow enthusiast.

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  • He had a miniature dachshund named Rusty, " He's a lovely little fellow.

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  • He was also the first to highlight the dangers of AIDS to his fellow countrymen.

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  • Roth co-wrote the screenplay with fellow debutant, Randy Pearlstein from a story by Roth.

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  • The poor fellow went away very dejected, and the Holy Father continued his walk.

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  • He said a fellow detainee taken to " Secure " had been coughing up blood, and alleges he was denied his medication.

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  • My mom, a fellow devotee to the cause, is suitably impressed by my dedication.

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  • A surprisingly large crowd of fellow early risers was up for first dibs on the freshly groomed runs.

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  • In the interest of fellow diners, please refrain from smoking at the table.

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  • Just as Christ does not disassociate Himself from a sinner like me, so we ought not to disassociate ourselves from our fellow sinners.

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  • The Bishop's fellow clerics did everything they could to prevent justice being done, to avoid disgrace to the reformed religion of Ireland.

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    0
  • With all his superhuman qualities and achievements, Sri Krishna never appeared distant to any of his fellow human beings.

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  • The Green Party is deeply distressed by threats of NATO strikes against fellow Europeans in Kosovo.

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  • As you enjoy the barbecue, get to know your fellow adventurers, before spending the last few moments in the city exploring downtown.

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    0
  • Another respondent talks about fellow students not believing dyslexia existed.

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  • Toni also describes problems for her and her fellow evacuees as they slowly settled into their new lives.

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    0
  • According to a Sri Lankan evangelical pastor, some of his fellow evangelicals have engaged in insensitive conduct.

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  • One of my fellow examinees told me he'd been working for the exam for eighteen months, and he looked pretty relaxed!

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    0
  • Calling a fellow wiz a drug addict is only excusable if that wiz actually IS a drug addict.

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  • Rose moved to England in the mid 1970s, performing occasionally in clubs around London, sometimes with his fellow expatriate Tim Hardin.

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  • He was elected a fellow of the College in 1900.

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    0
  • In respect of each Senior visiting fellow the host institution will be required to provide a schedule of anticipated costs at the application stage.

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  • Retired in 2001, and, soon after, appointed an Honorary fellow in the School.

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  • He became a fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England in 1996.

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  • Three-quarters of Council must be in favor for an honorary fellow to be elected.

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  • As a post-doctoral research fellow, she is currently working on a number of publications based on her doctoral research.

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  • Mick Moore is a Professorial fellow at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex.

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  • They are headed by the Vice-Master, with the senior fellow at his left.

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  • Steven Everts is senior research fellow at the CER.

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  • She was formerly a research fellow at the University of Sussex.

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  • Currently her teaching fellow work includes further development of quality systems for the school.

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  • While swimming and catching a tan [okay, sunburn ], I met some fellow travelers from London.

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  • The other day I trained a fellow female worker and found that we were very flirtatious during the session.

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  • Additionally you will benefit from the combined knowledge of your fellow franchisees.

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  • I have come to my present position as a result of decades of debate with fellow freethinkers.

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  • Rose passed fellow Class D championship front-runner Parkington into Old Hall and led the class.

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  • Peacock was left to plow a lone furrow up front with his fellow forward supplementing a packed midfield.

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  • Please spread the word on your blogs, invite friends, family, or fellow geeks.

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    0
  • Away from the lights, Dempsey made a perfect getaway - in contrast to fellow front row man Mayes.

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    0
  • Their fellow workers without degree qualifications often hit the glass ceiling, regardless how hard working and motivated they are.

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  • You also have to put up with loads of grubby, battered fellow festival goers who you've probably had enough of by then.

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  • Pete is a thoughtful writer, a zesty social figure, and an all round good fellow.

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    0
  • According to Branch volunteers, he is a very gregarious fellow who just loves being the center of attention.

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    0
  • Acting on a tip-off from a fellow political hack, Nelson accused Sunday Telegraph political editor Patrick Hennessy of being behind the dirty deed.

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    0
  • Now as our fellow workers were so hasty we were bound to come out on strike.

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  • He is too haughty to listen to truth from the lips of any of his fellow men.

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  • You have the right to take a trade union representative or fellow worker into a disciplinary or grievance hearing.

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    0
  • Even then they had the heaviness of fellow Brum band Black Sabbath.

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  • The title " fellow soldier, " by the way, is a very, very honorable title.

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  • Humphreys, the Wales international hooker, will start in a front row that also includes John Mallett and fellow Welshman Simon Emms.

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  • It was in a conversation with fellow housemate Steph that Cameron revealed his lack of female company. I definitely would like one.

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  • It's your fellow humans you want to worry about.

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  • During a show staged for fellow inmates, he managed a mass hypnotism of the warders.

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    0
  • Increasingly, Firms are rewarding staff who gain ILEX qualifications and attain Member and Fellow status, many will fund ilex qualifications and attain Member and Fellow status, many will fund ILEX courses too.

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  • He is not a bad fellow, tho an absolute imbecile in his profession.

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    0
  • Alerted to a new danger by the murder of a fellow immortal, Sam begins an epic quest to find the mysterious Pandora Keys.

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    0
  • He was, I am certain, a thoroughly good fellow, while I, no doubt, was an aggressive young imp.

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    0
  • Stealing from a fellow thief, turning state informer and a host of other offenses were punished by execution.

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    0
  • Some of his fellow inmates have an escape plan.

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  • He is full of deep, wordy introspection about his fellow team members.

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  • Although he seems a rather irritable fellow, I am willing to persevere with him for your sake, my dear lady.

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  • We are fellow islanders in a shared democracy, without oppression of one nation by another.

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    0
  • But then this was a fellow of " excellent fancy " as well as " infinite jest.

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    0
  • She is joined by fellow female jock Scarlett Ettienne.

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    0
  • The group included keyboardist McKinley Horton, drummer Daryl Burgee and fellow Heaven & Earth vocalist Keith Steward.

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    0
  • He felt a certain kinship with the irrepressible fellow.

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    0
  • The kiwi number one also had a reasonably straight forward win in the quarters, beating fellow kiwi number one also had a reasonably straight forward win in the quarters, beating fellow kiwi Josh Greenfield 11/9 11/6 11/10.

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  • I favor Battle Front, but that is mainly because I know the fellow kiwis running the outfit.

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  • Needless to say the fellow was absolutely knackered in the morning.

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  • I just learned over time to avoid being too " heavy ' with my fellow laity.

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  • I remained in the Dundee department as a research fellow until I was awarded a lectureship in 1999.

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    0
  • Finally he discussed the matter with his fellow lodger.

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    0
  • Whether I achieve so lofty an ideal or not, I share the dream of fellow researchers.

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    0
  • Also, the biographical information of fellow mages can be read here.

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    0
  • He exchanged harsh words and occasionally fisticuffs with fellow mouthy mavericks like Spike Lee, Oliver Stone and producer Don Murphy.

    0
    0
  • At the same time the employers and fellow employees become sensitized to individuals with mild to moderate mental retardation.

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    0
  • If your fellow miniaturists like it enough you may even win a prize.

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    0
  • Perhaps the bruises of his childhood never healed enough for him to overcome a fundamental mistrust of his fellow human beings.

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    0
  • I use no java or frames, wanting fellow monastics on low budgets with old programs to have equal access.

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    0
  • While others race to win, Edward's goal is simply to complete the race and earn the respect of his fellow mushers.

    0
    0
  • The Guilds are a great way to learn and share new skills, meet fellow crafters and enjoy a good natter!

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    0
  • All the mystery of his vanishing revolved on your description of a hulking fellow in a red neckcloth.

    0
    0
  • Team Bath got their first DML victory with a 3-0 win over fellow newcomers Yate Town.

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    0
  • The group went on to heap praise on fellow nominee Richard Hawley.

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    0
  • In winning the prize, Meg Rosoff had faced stiff competition from fellow debut novelists.

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    0
  • It seemed obscene a private entity could profit off the imprisonment of fellow citizens.

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  • They must be informed of their right to be accompanied by a fellow employe or representative, shop steward or trade union official.

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    0
  • Forget what my fellow oldies say about youth of today not appreciating this stuff.

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    0
  • Poor fellow, he was slain, and my heart was deeply pained at his loss and in sympathy with his stricken family.

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    0
  • The link with the moral superiority of Western engagement in the Third World today was lost on his fellow panelists.

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    0
  • It'll now join fellow former industry pariah Napster as a fully paid-up digital music distributor.

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    0
  • It's a good way to get to know fellow parishioners!

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    0
  • Because Gummer and his fellow parliamentarians have made up their minds that fiddles are out.

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    0
  • You must forgive my ignorance, my dear fellow, but being a simple country parson, legal matters are not exactly my forte.

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    0
  • You will be expected to examine your fellow students, so the chances of finding ocular pathology in such a young population is low.

    0
    0
  • They were the worst terrorist attacks ever perpetrated against our own country with hundreds of our fellow British citizens murdered.

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    0
  • Peter Hodgson is a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, and a research physicist.

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    0
  • Mary had sent the letters to fellow plotter Sir Anthony Babington.

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  • Would it be a shank in his side from a fellow prisoner?

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  • Jeff (Gene Bervoets ), a fellow student, encourages Harry to attend the college prom.

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    0
  • M Raymond Bellour, the visiting British Film Institute " Research Fellow ", introduced this season with a bold pronouncement.

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  • A vise provost, who is also a fellow.

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  • I had had and I imagine fellow workers with psychics have had this sort of experience with a number of well known psychics.

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    0
  • The eighth seed faces qualifier Simon Parke, a fellow Yorkshireman, in the first round.

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    0
  • During his Oxford days, he enjoyed rowing down the Thames with fellow students, and he also became a keen rambler.

    0
    0
  • They are supported well by fellow rapper Ludacris and Devon Aoki as Suki and Cole Hauser makes a decent villain.

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    0
  • From his fellow man I will require a reckoning for the life of man.

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    0
  • He was watching that young fellow with evident relish.

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  • Yet it seems sad to feel such desperate repulsion from one's fellow beings, however degraded.

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    0
  • I was never as devious as him or would have been so nasty to a fellow schoolmate.

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    0
  • Epic's Donald Clark is taking part in a debate with fellow scot James Naughtie, presenter of BBC Radio 4's Today program.

    0
    0
  • Travel without moving and make your home a happy haven for your fellow scouts in the process And don't forget.

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  • A fellow of the ICSA, he previously held senior Company Secretarial, legal and corporate services positions in a number of industries.

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    0
  • Her mother is an extra in The Bill, where her fellow actresses have all helped to sew sequins on Jenna's costumes.

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    0
  • Then said he to me see thou do it not for I am thy fellow servant & of thy brethren &c.

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  • Andrew and his fellow shipmates begin to get to know one another and start adjusting to their new floating home.

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  • I always thought it was a vocation they felt to serve their fellow man, not a lucrative sideline.

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  • Gildas chastens his fellow Britons for rebellions that he regards as sinful.

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    0
  • After some research, fellow biologists identified the fish as a northern snakehead.

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  • For to-night I can make the poor fellow all snug with the tarpaulin of your boat.

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  • The ` new system ', however consisted of minimizing the contact of fellow prisoners so that they lived in virtual solitary confinement.

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  • I WOULD like to add my comments on the mounting concern by fellow drivers of ever-increasing excessive speeding in this country.

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  • The fellow will introduce probes spheres (both polystyrene and magnetic) in to a range of cells.

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  • Dance, " said the squire, " you are a very noble fellow.

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  • The Fellow will receive a stipend of £ 9000.

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  • But much of his approach does not translate well to the UK, says Kenneth Baer, a fellow democratic strategist.

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  • Alumni include fellow supermodel Elle Macpherson, Whitney Houston, Paul Gascoigne and It-girl Tara Palmer-Tompkinson.

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  • Here she faced tough opposition from fellow county teammate, Anna Bradly who won through 3-0 to book herself a place in the final.

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  • They were anxious to make the most of all the advantages, which a railroad would bring to them, and their fellow townsfolk.

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  • We escorted the troopships for a couple of days, finally being relieved by our fellow cruiser, HMS Glasgow.

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  • The pilot, a younger fellow, seemed trustworthy.

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  • Her efforts are thus identified as providing an eligible model of argument from which her fellow tutees can derive guidance.

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  • Last November she became the first transsexual to march in the annual Remembrance Day parade at the Cenotaph when she accompanied fellow Falklands veterans.

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  • They say that many more of their fellow villagers ran away; they did not know what became of them.

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  • A little fellow sits on my shoulder, and if the ego is swelling says " remember you are a complete and utter wanker!

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  • A perfect place to visit with your fellow hen weekenders.

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  • If the mortal gets lippy, then you can be sure it was a fellow wiz or an arch-wiz testing you.

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  • Ward, a fellow workman, held him up to the fresh air supply for three hours, thus saving his life.

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  • A fellow Australian journalist, Eric Campbell, suffered minor shrapnel wounds in the blast.

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  • He graduated as a senior wrangler in 1818, and became a fellow of Trinity in 1819.

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  • Paul is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and is a keen yachtsman.

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  • Thus the ectodermal rim runs round the edge of each lobe of the umbrella and then passes upwards towards the base of the tentacle from the re-entering angle between two adjacent lobes, to form with its fellow of the next lobe a tentacle-clasp or peronium, i.e.

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  • Educated at Harrow, Brasenose College, Oxford, and Göttingen, he was elected fellow of Brasenose and in 1884 keeper of the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, holding this post till 1908.

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  • From Winchester he removed to Oxford in 1811, where he became a scholar at Corpus Christi College; in 1815 he was elected fellow of Oriel College; and there he continued to reside until 1819.

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  • Man seeks to influence his fellow men in various ways, by intimidation, by deceit, by bribery; and it is quite natural to find the same ideas in the sphere of religion.

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  • He was educated at Norwich and at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, bcoming a fellow in 1849.

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  • It was assumed that the Protestant nobles' jealousy of the burgesses would prevent them from interfering; but religious sympathy proved stronger than caste prejudice, and the diets protested against the persecution of their fellow citizens so vehemently that religious matters were withdrawn from their jurisdiction.

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  • So highly were his merits appreciated by his professors - Schleiermacher was accustomed to say that he possessed a special charisma for the science of "Introduction" - that in 1818 after he had passed the examinations for entering the ministry he was recalled to Berlin as Repetent or tutorial fellow in theology, a temporary post which the theological faculty had obtained for him.

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  • Obtaining, as a young man, in 1048, the see of Coutances, by his brother's influence (see Mowbray), he raised from his fellow nobles and from their Sicilian spoils funds for completing his cathedral, which was consecrated in 1056.

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  • In the Life by Gilpin it is given as 1470, a palpable error, and possibly a misprint for 1490.1 Foxe states that at " the age of fourteen years he was sent to the university of Cambridge," and as he was elected fellow of Clare in 1509, his year of entrance was in all likelihood 1505.

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  • In 1669 an unworthy follower - Daniel Scargil by name, a fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge - had to recant publicly and confess that his evil life had been the result of Hobbist doctrines.

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  • All the sufferers, however, were wise enough to abstain from talking about their beatings, except Osborne, the most rapacious and brutal of booksellers, who proclaimed everywhere that he had been knocked down by the huge fellow whom he had hired to puff the Harleian Library.

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  • John was elected scholar of Corpus in his fifteenth, and fellow of Oriel in his nineteenth year, April 1811.

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  • Sir John Taylor Coleridge, his fellow scholar at Corpus and his life-long friend, says of him, after their friendship of five and fifty years had closed, "It was the singular happiness of his nature, remarkable even in his undergraduate days, that love for him was always sanctified by reverence - reverence that did not make the love less tender, and love that did but add intensity to the reverence."

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  • Rabelais is the incarnation of the "esprit Gaulois," a jovial, careless soul, not destitute of common sense or even acute intellectual power, but first of all a good fellow, rather preferring a broad jest to a'fine-pointed one, and rollicking through life like a good-natured undergraduate.

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  • Still less has Livy anything in common with the naïve anxiety of Dionysius of Halicarnassus to make it clear to his fellow Greeks that the irresistible people who had mastered them was in origin, in race and in language Hellenic like themselves.

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  • He was fellow or foreign corresponding member of the French Institute, the academies of Berlin, Göttingen, St Petersburg, Milan, Rome, Leiden, Upsala and Hungary; and he was nominated an officer of the Legion of Honour by President Carnot.

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  • Discontent became rife, and on the ship breaking out of the ice in the spring Hudson had a violent quarrel with a dissolute young fellow named Henry Greene, whom he had befriended by taking him on board, and who now retaliated by inciting the discontented part of the crew to put Hudson and eight others (including the sick men) out of the ship. This happened on the 22nd of June r 6 r 1.

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  • Besides becoming a; and afterwards senior censor, of the Royal College of Physicians, and a fellow of the Royal Society, he held the post of secretary to the Royal Institution for many years.

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  • You will be glad to hear that Tommy has a kind lady to teach him, and that he is a pretty, active little fellow.

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  • I remembered the story of a conceited fellow, who, in fine clothes, was wont to lounge about the village once, giving advice to workmen.

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  • A perfectly absurd and stupid fellow, and a gambler too, I am told.

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  • Look here, my dear fellow, get from Kozlovski all the reports from our scouts.

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  • On Kutuzov's staff, among his fellow officers and in the army generally, Prince Andrew had, as he had had in Petersburg society, two quite opposite reputations.

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  • I don't like that fellow, he said, regardless of the quartermaster's presence.

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  • Count!... Don't ruin a young fellow... here is this wretched money, take it...

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  • It's not pleasant, but what's to be done, my dear fellow?

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  • Oh, we do prize it, old fellow!

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  • Oh, my dear fellow, we're in such a stew here these last two days.

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  • Reviewing his impressions of the recent battle, picturing pleasantly to himself the impression his news of a victory would create, or recalling the send-off given him by the commander-in-chief and his fellow officers, Prince Andrew was galloping along in a post chaise enjoying the feelings of a man who has at length begun to attain a long-desired happiness.

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  • That's just it, my dear fellow.

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  • It's a bad lookout, old fellow!

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  • It's in charge of the queer fellow we saw without his boots.

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  • At that moment he was clearly thinking of nothing but how dashing a fellow he would appear as he passed the commander.

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  • Good-bye, my dear fellow! and for some unknown reason tears suddenly filled his eyes.

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  • Sit down, dear fellow, sit down!

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  • How absent-minded you are, my dear fellow.

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  • Fine young fellow! he said.

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  • Such a fine fellow must serve.

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  • Well, so that's finished, my dear fellow!

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  • On receiving Boris' letter he rode with a fellow officer to Olmutz, dined there, drank a bottle of wine, and then set off alone to the Guards' camp to find his old playmate.

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  • Do go somewhere, anywhere... to the devil!" he exclaimed, and immediately seizing him by the shoulder and looking amiably into his face, evidently wishing to soften the rudeness of his words, he added, "Don't be hurt, my dear fellow; you know I speak from my heart as to an old acquaintance."

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  • Well, my dear fellow, so you still want to be an adjutant?

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  • Ah, my dear fellow, what a battle we have gained!

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  • And do you know, my dear fellow, it seems to me that Bonaparte has decidedly lost bearings, you know that a letter was received from him today for the Emperor.

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  • You know Bilibin--he's a very clever fellow.

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  • He is a wise and clever fellow.

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  • How is your old fellow?

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  • Go, my dear fellow, and see whether the third division has passed the village.

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  • Kolya, * dear fellow...

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  • No, Vaska is a splendid fellow.

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  • Only on horse back and in the mazurka was Denisov's short stature not noticeable and he looked the fine fellow he felt himself to be.

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  • My dear fellow, what have you been up to in Moscow?

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  • A fine fellow--your friend--I like him!

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  • Another says clever things and one doesn't care to listen, but this one talks rubbish yet stirs an old fellow up.

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  • In answer to Rostov's renewed questions, Denisov said, laughing, that he thought he remembered that some other fellow had got mixed up in it, but that it was all nonsense and rubbish, and he did not in the least fear any kind of trial, and that if those scoundrels dared attack him he would give them an answer that they would not easily forget.

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  • I'm sorry, sorry for that fine fellow.

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  • Only excuse me, my dear fellow, I'll give you twenty thousand and a note of hand for eighty thousand as well.

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  • He is a most absent-minded and absurd fellow, but he has a heart of gold.

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  • Rostov had become a bluff, good-natured fellow, whom his Moscow acquaintances would have considered rather bad form, but who was liked and respected by his comrades, subordinates, and superiors, and was well contented with his life.

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  • He is an excellent fellow....

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  • Old fellow!... wailed Nicholas.

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  • You've hooked a fine fellow!

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  • The young fellow on the box jumped down to hold the horses and Anatole and Dolokhov went along the pavement.

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  • He is a very shrewd and garrulous fellow.

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  • I tell you once for all, my dear fellow," said he, "into the fire with all such things!

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  • I say, fellow countryman!

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  • Boris belonged to the latter and no one else, while showing servile respect to Kutuzov, could so create an impression that the old fellow was not much good and that Bennigsen managed everything.

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  • He's a brave fellow.

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  • So it was not because of Napoleon's commands that they killed their fellow men.

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  • Go, my dear fellow, go... and Christ be with you!

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  • Prince Andrew could no longer restrain himself and wept tender loving tears for his fellow men, for himself, and for his own and their errors.

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  • The count had the father fetched, but the fellow stuck to it.

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  • That's the sort of fellow he is.

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  • He was told by his fellow officers that the screams of the crowd and the shrieks of the woman were due to the fact that General Ermolov, coming up to the crowd and learning that soldiers were dispersing among the shops while crowds of civilians blocked the bridge, had ordered two guns to be unlimbered and made a show of firing at the bridge.

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  • Come along then! the publican and the tall young fellow repeated one after the other, and they moved up the street together.

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  • Since the world began and men have killed one another no one has ever committed such a crime against his fellow man without comforting himself with this same idea.

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  • There, don't let us be cross, old fellow!

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  • He's a German, but a nice fellow all the same....

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  • Perhaps it's his brat that the fellow is looking for.

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  • And a minute or two later the Frenchman, a black-eyed fellow with a spot on his cheek, in shirt sleeves, really did jump out of a window on the ground floor, and clapping Pierre on the shoulder ran with him into the garden.

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  • Have you lost anyone, my dear fellow?

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  • Pierre looked round at his fellow prisoners and scrutinized them.

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  • Don't fret, friend--'suffer an hour, live for an age!' that's how it is, my dear fellow.

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  • That's how it is, dear fellow.

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  • Thanks to her activity and energy, which infected her fellow travelers, they approached Yaroslavl by the end of the second week.

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  • Count Orlov-Denisov consulted his fellow officers.

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  • Your fellow countrymen are emerging boldly from their hiding places on finding that they are respected.

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  • Here and now for the first time he fully appreciated the enjoyment of eating when he wanted to eat, drinking when he wanted to drink, sleeping when he wanted to sleep, of warmth when he was cold, of talking to a fellow man when he wished to talk and to hear a human voice.

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  • In the corporal's changed face, in the sound of his voice, in the stirring and deafening noise of the drums, he recognized that mysterious, callous force which compelled people against their will to kill their fellow men--that force the effect of which he had witnessed during the executions.

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  • See how that fellow has loaded himself up, he can hardly walk!

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  • See that fellow there sitting on the trunks....

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  • That fellow's dropped his sack and doesn't see it.

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  • Please, my dear fellow, will you sharpen my saber for me?

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  • You're a clever fellow!

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