Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
coown .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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That same year, WMG approved at least $240,000 in funding for Green Owl, a label coowned by Edgar’s eldest son, Ben Brewer, a critically lauded musician.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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That same year, WMG approved at least $240,000 in funding for Green Owl, a label coowned by Edgar’s eldest son, Ben Brewer, a critically lauded musician.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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That same year, WMG approved at least $240,000 in funding for Green Owl, a label coowned by Edgar’s eldest son, Ben Brewer, a critically lauded musician.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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That same year, WMG approved at least $240,000 in funding for Green Owl, a label coowned by Edgar’s eldest son, Ben Brewer, a critically lauded musician.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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In 1988, Sony, which coowned the patent on CD technology along with Philips, followed their example and purchased CBS Records for $2 billion.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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As part of his executive package to run WMG, he sold his new employers London Records, a not particularly successful label that he coowned, for $200 million–far more than it was worth.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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In 1988, Sony, which coowned the patent on CD technology along with Philips, followed their example and purchased CBS Records for $2 billion.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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In 1988, Sony, which coowned the patent on CD technology along with Philips, followed their example and purchased CBS Records for $2 billion.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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As part of his executive package to run WMG, he sold his new employers London Records, a not particularly successful label that he coowned, for $200 million–far more than it was worth.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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As part of his executive package to run WMG, he sold his new employers London Records, a not particularly successful label that he coowned, for $200 million–far more than it was worth.
Fortune’s Fool Fred Goodman 2010
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