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kipper and is
Another story of the accidental invention of kipper is set in 1843, with John Woodger of Seahouses in Northumberland, when fish for processing was left overnight in a room with a smoking stove.
In Haiti, kipper is eaten with scrambled eggs for breakfast or mixed with pasta or rice.
The Manx word for kipper is which literally translates as red herring.
A kipper is also sometimes referred to as a " red herring ", although particularly strong curing is required to produce a truly red kipper.
A kipper is a whole herring that has been split from tail to head, gutted, salted or pickled, and cold smoked.
There is a fish and shellfish processing industry as well as the traditional art of kipper curing.
The word kipper is cognate with Icelandic kippa (" to pull, snatch "), Danish kippen (" to seize "), and a Middle High German word that means " to beat or kick ".
The word often is used in the Old Testament to translate the Hebrew words kipper and kippurim, which mean “ propitiation ” or “ expiation .” The word occurs in the KJV in and has the basic meaning of reconciliation.

kipper and herring
Thousands are produced annually in the town of Peel, where two kipper houses, Moore's Kipper Yard ( founded 1882 ) and Devereau and Son ( founded 1884 ), smoke and export herring.
Titles included " Totentanz " ( Death Dance ), " Idiot ", " High Society ", " Im Suff " ( Sloshed ), a self-portrait, " Twist tanzende Nutten " ( Twist dancing hookers ), " Klee und Ensor, um einen Bückling streitend " ( Klee and Ensor, arguing over a kipper, " Bückling " carrying the double meaning, both a smoked herring and a bowing ) and " Peter Lorre oder einer, der aus Berufung die schöne Aussicht versperrt ".

kipper and small
Another theory traces the word kipper to the kip, or small beak, that male salmon develop during the breeding season.

kipper and from
The function of the kipper was to follow his knight in combat and retrieve armour or arms from fallen adversaries.

kipper and head
Stepping on board to investigate, she slips on a kipper, bangs her head and falls unconscious.

kipper and .
As a verb, " to kipper " ( see kippering ) means to preserve by rubbing with salt or other spices before drying in the open air or in smoke.
These stories and others are known to be apocryphal because the word " kipper " long predates this.
In the United States, where kippers are less commonly eaten than in the UK, they are almost always sold as either canned " kipper snacks " or in jars found in the refrigerated foods section.
He would sometimes wait for up to 10 seconds until he appeared leading to resounding applause, walk to the microphone and just stand there in his costume, a gloriously colourful suit with plus-fours, a kipper tie, trilby and co-respondent shoes and wait for the laughter to begin.
In medieval tournaments a kipper was a person employed by a knight, usually a vassal of the knight such as a slave, serf, or peasant.
If the adversary was not completely subdued and ready to surrender these, the kipper would bang on the armour-clad opponent with various blunt non-lethal instruments, like heavy sticks or clubs, to knock him unconscious for the purpose of gathering the spoils without further protest.
Following the death of his wife Ivy ( who made his enormous kipper tie out of brightly coloured curtain material at the beginning of his stage career ), later in life English married a young dancer, Teresa, whom he met during one of his stage shows, and had a child with her – Clare Louise English.
" Dedicated to the culture of the 1960s and 1970s, Sir Roy went on to amuse audiences at the V & A in 1974 with his collection of fedora hats, kipper ties and maxi coats.
He said: " little case can be made in the twenty-first century for an expensive building to exist for a service once a week or month lasting an hour ," and he recommends someone taking " an axe and hatchet the utterly awful kipper coloured choir stalls and pews, drag them out of the church and burn them ," and " letting in the local community " in order to preserve many rural churches in Britain.

is and whole
Often it is recognized that all the details of the pattern may not be essential to the outcome but, because the pattern was empirically determined and not developed through theoretical understanding, one is never quite certain which behavior elements are effective, and the whole pattern becomes ritualized.
Reaction is rooted in a perception of tradition as a whole.
Britain in the nineteenth century is a textbook designed `` to give the sense of continuous growth, to show how economic led to social, and social to political change, how the political events reacted on the economic and social, and how new thoughts and new ideals accompanied or directed the whole complicated process ''.
It is most important that we recognize the law of love as being unbreakable in all personal relationships, whether individually, socially or as between whole nations of people.
We find, in the first place, that the students overwhelmingly approve of higher education, positively evaluate the job their own institution is doing, do not accept most of the criticisms levelled against higher education in the public prints, and, on the whole, approve of the way their university deals with value-problems and value inculcation.
The whole purpose of Man's Hope is to portray the tragic dialectic between means and ends inherent in all organized political violence -- and even when such violence is a necessary and legitimate self-defense of liberty, justice and human dignity.
Around that statue in the green park where children play and lovers walk in twos and there is a glowing view of the whole city, in that park are the rows of marble busts of Garibaldi's fallen men, the ones who one day rushed out of the Porta San Pancrazio and, under fire all the way, up the long, straight narrow lane to take, then lose the high ground of the Villa Doria Pamphili.
Prosperity for the whole nation is certainly preferred to a tax cut.
A road block to desirable local or borough improvements, heretofore dependent on the pocketbook vote of taxpayers and hence a drag on progress, is removed by making these a charge against the whole city instead of an assessment paid by those immediately affected.
`` It's a whole lot easier '', he said, `` to increase the population of Nevada, than it is to increase the population of New York city ''.
He's hitting the ball hard, in the batting cage, and his whole attitude is improved over this time last year.
When I hold my son he stiffens his whole body in my arms until he is as straight and stiff as a board.
Far from being irrelevant to the ecumenical task, the Pontiff believes that a revivified Church is required in order that the whole world may see Catholicism in the best possible light.
Secondly, a whole series of addresses and actions by the Pope and by others show that concern for Christian unity is still very much alive and growing within the Church.
The whole problem of `` peaceful coexistence and peaceful competition '' with the capitalist world is in the very center of this Congress.
I hear the whole bunch is croakin out in the snow.
I have observed that being up on a horse changes the whole character of a man, and when a very small man is up on a saddle, he'd like as not prefer to eat his meals there.
I pray to God that he may be spared to us for many years to come for this is an influence the United States and the whole world can ill afford to lose.
It would seem, then, that movable property and equipment is not taxed as a whole but that certain types are taxed in towns where this is bound to be expedient for that particular kind of personal property.
No corporation engaged in commerce shall acquire, directly or indirectly, the whole or any part of the stock or other share capital of another corporation engaged also in commerce, where the effect of such acquisition may be to substantially lessen competition between the corporation whose stock is so acquired and the corporation making the acquisition, or to restrain such commerce in any section or community, or tend to create a monopoly of any line of commerce.
Section 7 is designed to arrest in its incipiency not only the substantial lessening of competition from the acquisition by one corporation of the whole or any part of the stock of a competing corporation, but also to arrest in their incipiency restraints or monopolies in a relevant market which, as a reasonable probability, appear at the time of suit likely to result from the acquisition by one corporation of all or any part of the stock of any other corporation.
It is but part of the whole process within the Department that goes into the making of the final recommendation to the appeal board.

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