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*" Hanging out a shingle ", a common phrase in the legal profession meaning to start one's own law firm.
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Some Related Sentences
*" and Hanging
*" A Simple Solution of the Unexpected Hanging Paradox: A Kind of a Leaky Inductive Argument Solution " by Kedar Joshi, at SSRN
*" And Her Golden Hair Was Hanging Down Her Back " ( w. Monroe H. Rosenfeld m. Felix McGlennon )-Maud Foster on Berliner Records
*" and out
*" The Engine, with the carriages attached to it, shall be run by hand up to the Starting Post, and as soon as the steam is got up to fifty pounds per square inch (), the engine shall set out upon its journey.
*" As soon as the Engine has performed this task, ( which will be equal to the travelling from Liverpool to Manchester ,) there shall be a fresh supply of fuel and water delivered to her ; and, as soon as she can be got ready to set out again, she shall go up to the Starting Post, and make ten trips more, which will be equal to the journey from Manchester back again to Liverpool.
*" The time of performing every trip shall be accurately noted, as well as the time occupied in getting ready to set out on the second journey.
*" Blecher of California's savviest and most experienced litigators " was flabbergasted that this young kid knocked him out of the box, really in the first round, " said litigator and partner Thomas D. Barr to the New York Times Sunday Magazine, June 1, 1986
*" The one talent of David's that stands out is his ability to lay out a course of action that would take into account any sort of complicated facts and develop a far-reaching scenario.
*" In court and out, he speaks a brand of English so simple and direct that he sounds like the high school teacher he once thought he would become.
*" Carrying out or authorising operations likely to damage an SSSI without meeting the requirements to notify Natural England.
*" cabut / cantas "-to run off, flee or to escape (' Cabut ' is a Malay word meaning to pull or pulling out as a transitive verb, or to become detached as an intransitive verb.
*" How To Live on Christ " a pamphlet by Harriet Beecher Stowe, taken from her Introduction to Chistopher Dean's " Religion As It Should Be or The Remarkable Experience and Triumphant Death of Ann Thane Peck " published in 1847 Hudson Taylor sent a pamphlet using the words of this preface out to all the missionaries of the China Inland Mission in 1869.
*" He developed a passion for jewels, which he carried, unset, in his pockets, taking them out for comfort when he was tired or in low spirits.
*" Don Remigio Rodríguez y Rodriguez ", an almost catatonic, extremely frank businessman ( and the owner of Rodríguez y Rodriguez Sociedad en Comandita ) who had a proclivity for face gestures and sticking out his tongue.
*" and ",
*" Kant's ' Appropriation ' of Lampe's God ", Harvard Theological Review 85: 1 ( January 1992 ), pp. 85 – 108 ; revised and reprinted as Chapter IV in Stephen Palmquist, Kant's Critical Religion ( Ashgate, 2000 ).
*" Able Toastmaster ", used as a postnominal for people granted awards from Toastmasters International
*" Big Dipper ", a song by Jethro Tull from their 1976 album Too Old to Rock ' n ' Roll: Too Young to Die!
*" Why Pascal is Not My Favorite Programming Language ", a popular criticism of Niklaus Wirth's Pascal.
*" Leap In and Try Things "-Interview with Brian Kernighan – on " Harmony at Work Blog ", October 2009.
*" Great Hunt On For 27 Navy Fliers Missing In Five Planes Off Florida ", The New York Times, December 7, 1945.
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