Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Outs Vangelis Moras (Cesena, loan); Lee Lucas (Burton Albion, loan)What they wanted Harry Redknapp has a strong squad, with two players for every position but he would love to add a marquee signing to significantly improve what he already has and to give impetus to the notion that Tottenham could mount a title challenge.
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The wine that I pulled out was the 2006 Finca Las Moras Malbec Reserva sample; suggested retail for this new release is $12; you may find it or other recent vintages near you for between $7 and $12 This wine was a simple pleasure from start to finish, because it was made in an apologetically New World fruit-forward style, but with some sensitivity and restraint.
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The wine that I pulled out was the 2006 Finca Las Moras Malbec Reserva sample; suggested retail for this new release is $12; you may find it or other recent vintages near you for between $7 and $12 This wine was a simple pleasure from start to finish, because it was made in an apologetically New World fruit-forward style, but with some sensitivity and restraint.
Archive 2008-10-01 2008
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And he would only be safe as long as Moras was in Tucson—he was the single one in the gang who knew him.
Deuces Wild Dusty Richards 2004
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Khus, Moras or Mura is densely tufted, perennial clump grass, with stiff leaf blades.
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And in the land of Picenum he left in the fortress of Petra four hundred men who had lived there previously, and in Auximus, which is the largest of all the cities of that country, he left four thousand Goths selected for their valour and a very energetic commander, Visandus by name, and two thousand men with Moras in the city of Urbinus.
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As the land is cleared for fifty yards on either side in order to admit the sunlight and to keep the Moras at a proper range, the great macao-trees, with their snaky, parasitic vines, on crashing to the ground, dislodge the pallid fungi and extraordinary orchids from their heavy foliage.
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The Martinezes, the Moras, the Garavels -- I couldn't name them all.
The Ne'er-Do-Well Rex Ellingwood Beach 1913
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The Moras, a tribe of Mahomedan boatmen who lead a wandering life on the streams in the Punjab and in Sind, subsist on the dolphin when by good chance they catch one; this is also the case with the
Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon Robert Armitage Sterndale 1870
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They noticed then that chance had led them back, while they talked, towards the place of sepulture of the Moras, on the summit of an open plateau from which they could see, above myriads of crowded roofs, Montmartre and Les Buttes Chaumont in the distance like vague white billows.
The Nabob, Vol. 2 (of 2) Alphonse Daudet 1868
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