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She ignores William Dobbin, who courts her for years, and treats him shabbily until eventually he leaves.
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She and ignores
She initially ignores severe headaches and brief episodes of dizziness and double vision, but when she uncharacteristically takes a spill while riding, and then tumbles down a flight of stairs, her secretary / best friend Ann King ( Geraldine Fitzgerald ) insists she see the family doctor, who refers her to a specialist.
She learns later — in Book 83, December 29, 1878 — from her father ( but does not apparently accept his statement, as she ignores it here in her preface ) that she was a full-term baby, suggesting that she was conceived before her parents had married and that all the mystification about her date of birth was intended to cover up that embarrassment.
She berates her sons, particularly Happy, for not helping Willy more, and supports Willy lovingly, despite the fact that Willy sometimes ignores her opinion over that of others.
She confronts Brad angrily and ignores his attempts at explanation, leaving with Jonathan who has arrived just in time to expose Rex as Brad and who takes her back to New York City.
She is levelheaded, in contrast to Ralph's pattern of inventing various schemes to enhance his wealth or his pride ; in each case, she sees the current one's unworkability, but he becomes angry and ignores her advice ( and by the end of the episode, her misgivings are almost always proven to have been well-founded ).
She warns him to keep away from her daughter and threatens to send him back to juvenile hall if he ignores her warning.
She fights and ultimately ignores a Sitting Ghost, which has “ thick short hair like an animal ’ s coat .” With the help of her peers, she lights buckets of alcohol and oil on fire and sings a song to banish the Sitting Ghost:
She sings about how he ignores her for his writing but she will always be in love with him (" I'm a Part of That ").
She wants go on the swings, but ignores Oobi's warnings about being careful, then falls off and hurts herself.
She ignores the obvious sexual implications of her date's compliments to her physical appearance, but accepts them instead as words directed at her as a human consciousness.
She and William
She was a daughter of Frederick William of Nassau-Weilburg ( 1768 – 1816 ) and his wife Burgravine Louise Isabelle of Kirchberg.
" She studied privately with William Sartain, a friend of Eakins and a New York artist invited to Philadelphia to teach a group of art students, starting in 1881.
According to lexicographer William Smith, " She was accused of too much familiarity with Orestes, prefect of Alexandria, and the charge spread among the clergy, who took up the notion that she interrupted the friendship of Orestes with their archbishop, Cyril.
She was daughter of Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria and had been previously married to William I of Württemberg.
She was the first female Attorney General and the second longest serving Attorney General after William Wirt.
She was the daughter of Margaret L. Kempe and William Burr Howell, and the granddaughter of the late New Jersey Governor Richard Howell and his wife Keziah.
She met and married William Davey, her first husband, at age 19 because she felt as if it was her duty as a daughter.
She is said to have been the daughter of a Welsh steel worker of Irish descent, William O ' Callaghan, who had been superintendent on the Indian State railways.
She did, however, act alone when William was engaged in military campaigns abroad, proving herself to be a powerful, firm, and effective ruler.
She had a crisis of faith and tended to attend religious services at the nearby St. Stephen's Church and discuss religion with William, Joseph's younger brother, as Joseph had apparently stopped attending religious services.
She was the only child of May Maxwell, a disciple of ` Abdu ' l-Bahá, and William Sutherland Maxwell, a Canadian architect.
Candaules, King of Lydia, Shews his Wife by Stealth to Gyges, One of his Ministers, As She Goes to Bed by William Etty.
She married William Carey, a minor noble, in February 1520, at Greenwich, with Henry VIII in attendance: soon after, Mary Boleyn became the English King's mistress.
She was the second of ten children of William Moller, a builder's supply merchant ; and Annie Delger.
She was given a pass by General William Hammond to ride in army ambulances to provide comfort to the soldiers and nurse them back to health and lobbied the U. S. Army bureaucracy, at first without success, to bring her own medical supplies to the battlefields.
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