Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
cite .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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By the way, the song is “From A Distance”, although the title cited here is part of the lyric.
Firedoglake » It’s Hurricane Season: Know Where Your Levee Is? 2006
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Louis Wright wrote that "Parts 6 and 7 of Modern Reports were known as 'Modern Cases'; they covered the period 1702-4," but the title cited here seems to fit the inventory description precisely.
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KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 17 - High Court judge Datuk Lau Bee Lan's controversial 'Allah' ruling that rocked the nation over who had rights to the term cited that the Home Minister and government's actions had been illegal, unconstitutional, irrational and had failed to satisfy that it was a threat to national security.
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From Standard 1 till Form 3 in a government school, I've never understood the term cited by my father - 'Don't let school get in the way of your education'.
Malaysiakini :: News 2010
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Neither was the term cited in any of the many references I examined, until I saw Dennis Anderson's
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Most will derive, from its title cited in other works, a Jewish plot that endangers America.
Anti-semite or just making statements that no one likes? | Jewschool 2007
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We have, and it is a practice, not a garment, called skinny dipping, from dipping one’s naked skin in the water, a locution cited in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1966.
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
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We have, and it is a practice, not a garment, called skinny dipping, from dipping one’s naked skin in the water, a locution cited in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1966.
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
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We have, and it is a practice, not a garment, called skinny dipping, from dipping one’s naked skin in the water, a locution cited in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1966.
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
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We have, and it is a practice, not a garment, called skinny dipping, from dipping one’s naked skin in the water, a locution cited in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1966.
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
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