Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
franchise .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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I snapped this photo the other day while walking by the Original Soup Man chain (franchised from the original Soup Nazi on Seinfeld) …
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And you have to wonder if the Dolphins - especially with the likely scenario of the top free safety in free agency, O.J. Atogwe, getting either signed to a long-term deal with the Rams or being "franchised" - would be willing to take a safety in the first round.
The Phinsider 2009
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The demonstrations mark the start of what is expected to be a drawn-out battle that protest organizers have called Occupy Nigeria, adopting the brand name franchised by the Wall Street protests against economic inequality.
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The demonstrations mark the start of what is expected to be a drawn-out battle that protest organizers have called Occupy Nigeria, adopting the brand name franchised by the Wall Street protests against economic inequality.
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A so-called franchised qb should have been able to AT LEAST BEAT the lowly Raiders AT HOME.
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A so-called franchised qb should have been able to AT LEAST BEAT the lowly Raiders AT HOME.
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Can anyone tell me, please, how it is that those who once felt "franchised" now feel "disenfranchised" because a single door has been opened to allow others at the table of grace?
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As Norton got older and her work more "franchised" I found it less interesting.
The First Andre Norton novels Dark Worlds Club 2009
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The movie itself, therefore, represents a kind of franchised marketing of what she sold exclusively to Redford: 10 million of us each chip in seven bucks, and Demi Moore takes off her clothes for us.
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Here we find a development of that vision of what Figgis along with others called the 'community of communities' as the basic Christian political model: the community of communities, the network of networks, standing with, alongside, the state, not 'franchised' by the state or controlled by the state, but representing that – as Figgis would have seen it – inalienable liberty of the agent, the citizen, to work cooperatively and live and understand cooperatively.
Archbishop's lecture celebrating 60th Anniversary of the William Temple Foundation 2008
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