Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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April 12th, 2006 at 3:14 pm 1. Courtesy of Suzanne in the previous thread, we read this statement that carefully avoids mentioning the word Censure – dated April 12, 2006 – as sent to her by her Senator:
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I have created a blog called Censure President Bush.
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The meter of seuen sillables is not vsual, no more is that of nine and eleuen, yet if they be well composed, that is, their Censure well-appointed, and their last accent which makes the concord, they
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Just today, Ponnuru's colleague, Byron York, reports on a new RNC ad called "Censure" which contains this passage:
Archive 2006-03-01 Glenn Greenwald 2006
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Just today, Ponnuru's colleague, Byron York, reports on a new RNC ad called "Censure" which contains this passage:
Various matters Glenn Greenwald 2006
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"Censure," says a celebrated writer, "is a tax which every man must pay to the public, who seeks to be eminent."
Tales and Novels — Volume 08 Maria Edgeworth 1808
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For a curious specimen of this _odium theologicum_, see the "Censure" of the Sorbonne on
Curiosities of Literature, Vol. 1 (of 3) Isaac Disraeli 1807
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"Censure", says a celebrated writer, "is a tax which every man must pay to the public, who seeks to be eminent."
Letters for Literary Ladies: To Which is Added, An Essay on the Noble Science of Self-Justification 1798
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"Censure," says a late ingenious author, "is the tax a man pays to the public for being eminent."
Essays and Tales Joseph Addison 1695
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updated below - with new RNC "Censure" ad and reply from Ramesh Ponnuru
Archive 2006-03-01 Glenn Greenwald 2006
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