Personen or any other person whatsoever oder irgendwelche andere Ursachen or any other causes oder sonstwo or elsewehere oder Worte ähnlicher Bedeutung or words of similar effect Ödland waste land Fehler bei der Übermittlung errors arising in the transmission of messages offen open offene Deckung open cover offene Diskussion open discussion offene Handelsgesellschaft general partnership offene Police floating policy offene Police open policy offene Rechnung open account offene Rechnungen outstanding account offene Reserven disclosed reserves offene Stelle; Eröffnung opening offener Lastwagen open truck offener Markt open market offener Posten open item offener Posten unpaid item offener Wettstreit open competition offenes Ende open end offenes Interview informal interview offenes Preisausschreiben open contest offenes System open system offensichtlich manifest offensichtlich obvious offensichtlich (adv.) — from Mr. Honey's Medium Business Dictionary (German-English) by Winfried Honig
could only draw one
The prosecutor could only draw one conclusion: that the man had jumped back “at such a moment and in such excitement simply with the object of ascertaining whether the only witness of his crime were dead; that he must therefore have been a man of great strength, coolness, decision and foresight even at such a moment,” ... and so on. — from The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Plato is thinking in the first instance of Greek poets who had graced the courts of Dionysius or Archelaus: and the old spirit of freedom is roused within him at their prostitution of the Tragic Muse in the praises of tyranny. — from The Republic of Plato by Plato
Tryphaena was disposed to mercy, as all was not lost for her pleasures, but Lycas remembered the seduction of his wife and the insults to which he had been subjected in the portico of the temple of Hercules: “Tryphaena,” he gritted out, his face convulsed with savage passion, “you are aware, I believe, that the immortal gods have a hand in human affairs: what did they do but lead these scoundrels aboard this ship in ignorance of the owner and then warn each of us alike, by a coincidence of dreams, of what they had done? — from The Satyricon — Complete by Petronius Arbiter
channels originally dug out
Ceremony, for instance, is compulsory in society and sometimes truly oppressive, yet its root lies in self-expression and in a certain ascendency of play which drags all life along into conventional channels originally dug out in irresponsible bursts of action. — from The Life of Reason: The Phases of Human Progress by George Santayana
clod of dirt or
Being obliged to say something, he would mine his brain and put in a blast and when the smoke and flying debris had cleared away the result would be what seemed to him but a poor little intellectual clod of dirt or two, and then he would be astonished to see everybody as lost in admiration as if he had brought up a ton or two of virgin gold. — from The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today by Charles Dudley Warner
But if it comes to a conflict of duty on this point, we must, I should say, follow the advice of Themistocles: when some one asked his advice whether he should give his daughter in marriage to a man who was poor but honest or to one who was rich but less esteemed, he said: | — from De Officiis by Marcus Tullius Cicero
completed our deployment on
Luckily there were only about a hundred, and after a skirmish, in which one of the Natal Carabineers was unhappily killed, they fell back and we completed our deployment on the top of the hill. — from London to Ladysmith via Pretoria by Winston Churchill
clouds of dust on
Without, encamp'd they lie, And should I quit this consecrated grove, Shaking their serpent locks, they would arise, And, raising clouds of dust on every side, Ceaseless pursue their miserable prey. — from Iphigenia in Tauris by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
companies of dancers or
Sometimes companies of dancers, or other entertainments furnished by the wealthier shopkeepers, will [278] attract gaping crowds, who watch and block the street until the advance guard of some approaching dashi scatters them for a moment. — from Japanese Girls and Women
Revised and Enlarged Edition by Alice Mabel Bacon
Serous arthritis Shoe, bar Charlier's Charlier's tip expansion Broué's De Fay's Einsiedel's Hartmann's Smith's for overreach plate rocker bar slipper, Broué's slipper and bar-clip, Einsiedel's three-quarter three-quarter bar thinned tip tip with 'dropped' heel with extended toe-piece with extended toe-piece (Nunn's) with heel-clip with 'set' heel Side-bone causes of definition of diagnosis of heredity a cause of Smith's operation for symptoms of treatment of Side-line, the Simple acute coronitis Simple acute periostitis Simple coronitis acute chronic Simple or cutaneous quittor causes of complications in curative treatment of definition of pathological anatomy of preventive treatment of prognosis of symptoms of treatment of Simple serous arthritis Simple synovitis, acute Smith's expansion shoe operation for laminitis operation for side-bone Solar edge of the wall, expansion and contraction of the Sole, chronic bruised Sole, expansion and contraction of the Sole, the Specific coronitis causes of definition of symptoms of treatment of Spongy hoof definition of symptoms of treatment of Stumbling after neurectomy Sub-horny quittor causes of complications in definition of diagnosis of necrosis of the lateral cartilage in (cartilaginous quittor) necrosis of tendon and ligament in (tendinous quittor) symptoms of treatment of surgical shoeing for Suppurating corn Suppuration in laminitis Suppurative arthritis causes of definition of diagnosis of pathology of symptoms of treatment of Suppurative periostitis Suppurative synovitis Surgical shoeing for corn for chronic laminitis for laminitis, acute for sand-crack for quittor Symptoms of acute simple coronitis of brittle hoof of canker of chronic coronitis of chronic laminitis of club-foot of contracted foot of corn of coronary contraction of the foot of crooked foot of false quarter of flat-foot of keraphyllocele of laminitis of laminitis in all four feet of laminitis in the fore-feet alone of laminitis in the hind-feet alone of nail-bound of navicular disease of pumiced foot of punctured foot of pyramidal disease of sand-crack of seedy-toe of side-bone of simple chronic coronitis of simple cutaneous quittor of specific coronitis of spongy hoof of sub-horny quittor of synovitis, chronic of synovitis, purulent or suppurative of synovitis, simple acute of thrush of weak heels Synovitis, acute simple causes of treatment of Tearing off of the entire hoof, accidental Tendon the extensor pedis the flexor pedis perforans the flexor pedis perforatus Tendons, the Thrush causes of definition of symptoms of treatment of Tight-nailing Tip-shoes Tissue, the velvety Tread, See Overreach Treatment of acute laminitis of acute simple coronitis of brittle hoof of canker of canker Bermbach's Hoffmann's Imminger's Malcolm's Rose's of chronic bruised sole of chronic coronitis of chronic laminitis of chronic laminitis by ligaturing the digital arteries of club-foot of contracted feet of contracted feet by expansion shoes of contracted feet by operations on the horn of corns of coronary contraction of the foot of crooked foot of curved hoof of cutaneous quittor of false quarter of keraphyllocele of nail-bound of navicular disease of necrotic plantar aponeurosis of periostitis of pumiced foot of punctured foot of punctured navicular bursa of pyramidal disease of ringed hoof of sand-crack of sand-crack by clamping the fissure of sand-crack by grooving the wall of sand-crack by wedging the fissure of seedy-toe of side-bone of simple chronic coronitis of specific coronitis of spongy hoof of sub-horny quittor of synovitis of thrush of weak heels Use of the horse that has undergone neurectomy> Vachette's sand-crack clamp Veins, the Velvety tissue, the Villate's caustic solution Wall, the Weak heels causes of definition of symptoms of treatment of Wedging the fissure in the treatment of sand-crack Wound in punctured foot, common situations of the Wounds of the lateral cartilages Wounds of the plantar aponeurosis THE END — from Diseases of the Horse's Foot by H. Caulton (Harry Caulton) Reeks
After he had finished his enquiries, and was preparing to depart, he desired to leave two custom-house officers behind him, on which the commodore told him that though as a man-of-war he was prohibited from trading, and had nothing to do with customs or duties of any kind, yet for the satisfaction of the Chinese, he would permit two of their people to be left on board, who might themselves be { 354} witnesses how punctually he should comply with his instructions. — from A Voyage Round the World in the Years MDCCXL, I, II, III, IV by Anson, George Anson, Baron
couple of dogs one
Presently a gig drove up to the door, and in came a couple of dogs, one a tall black greyhound, the other a large female setter, the coat of the latter dripping with rain, and shortly after two men from the gig entered, one who appeared to be the principal was a stout bluff-looking person between fifty and sixty dressed in a grey stuff coat and with a slouched hat on his head. — from Wild Wales: The People, Language, & Scenery by George Borrow
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