darf verlangt werden a higher price can be charged ein Jahr lang year-long ein Kind annehmen; adoptieren to adopt a child ein Konto abschließen; Saldo ziehen strike a balance ein Konto ausgleichen settle an account ein Konto ausgleichen; eine Rechnung bezahlen settle an account ein Konto begleichen settle an account ein Konto bei an account with ein Konto belasten charge to an account ein Konto belasten debit an account ein Konto erkennen credit an account with ein Konto eröffnen open an account ein Konto führen keep an account ein Konto haben bei bank with ein Konto haben bei hold an account with ein Konto richtig stellen adjust an account ein Konto schließen; abschließen close an account ein Konto überprüfen examine an account ein Konto überziehen (US) overcheck an account ein Konto unterhalten keep
— from Mr. Honey's Medium Business Dictionary (German-English) by Winfried Honig
Kara Fraŭlino, Karaj Gefratoj, Kara Amiko, Kara Mario, Patrino mia, (placing the possessive adjective after the noun in this way gives an affectionate sense, as in English "Mother mine," etc) etc.; (to persons whose opinions on some subject are known to agree with those of the writer)
— from A Complete Grammar of Esperanto by Ivy Kellerman Reed
Ili restis en malgranda urbo dum la nokto, kaj forrajdis kun tiuj amikoj.
— from A Complete Grammar of Esperanto by Ivy Kellerman Reed
from such a kind family?” “Kind families get in debt, and the laws of our country allow them to sell the child out of its mother’s bosom to pay its master’s debts,” said George, bitterly.
— from Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
"From Gajni came the Guhilot; the Tak from Asir; from Narlai the Chauhan; the Chalukya from Rahargarh; from Setubandha the Jarkhera; from Mandor the Khairavi; from Mangrol the Makwahana; from Jethgarh the Joria; from Taragarh the Rewar; the Kachhwaha from Narwar; from Sanchor the Kalam; from Junagarh the Dasanoh; from Ajmer the Gaur; from Lohadargarh the Chandano; from Dasaundi the Dor; from Delhi the Tuar; from Patan the Chawara, preserver of royalty ( Rajdhar ); from Jalor the Sonigira; from Sirohi the Deora; from Gagraun the Khichi; the Jadon from Junagarh; the Jhala from Patri; from Kanauj the Rathor; from Chotiala the Bala; from Piramgarh the Gohil; from Jaisalgarh the Bhatti; the 292 Busa from Lahore; the Sankhla from Roneja; the Sehat from Kherligarh; from Mandalgarh the Nikumbha; the Bargujar from Rajor; from Karangarh the Chandel; from Sikar the Sikarwal; from Umargarh the Jethwa; from Pali the Bargota; from Khantargarh the Jareja; from Jirga the Kherwar; from Kashmir the Parihara."
— from Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, v. 1 of 3 or the Central and Western Rajput States of India by James Tod
This man destroyed two sentinels to get his liberty; how many hundreds of thousands of his own and the Austrian people did King Frederick kill because he took a fancy to Silesia?
— from Barry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackeray
I returned her kisses, forcibly keeping down the violence of my feelings.
— from The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, 1725-1798. Complete by Giacomo Casanova
It was a beautiful and exhilarating sight to see the red-nosed man writhing in Mr. Weller’s grasp, and his whole frame quivering with anguish as kick followed kick in rapid succession; it was a still more exciting spectacle to behold Mr. Weller, after a powerful struggle, immersing Mr. Stiggins’s head in a horse-trough full of water, and holding it there, until he was half suffocated.
— from The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens
Danby, Drummondville, East , French Village, Kingsey, Kingsey Falls, Kirkdale, L’Avenir, Leonard’s Hill, Ruisseau des Chênes, St. Bonaventure, St. Germain de Grantham, St. Guillaume d’Upton, South Durham, Sydenham Place, Trenholm, Ulverton , Wheatland.
— from List of Post Offices in Canada, with the Names of the Postmasters ... 1873 by Canada. Post Office Department
Moreover, the ease with which it is possible to take the imagining which accompanies knowing for knowing [40] —the image formed being taken to be the object known and the forming it being taken to be the knowing it—renders it easy to transfer the thought of construction to the knowledge itself.
— from Kant's Theory of Knowledge by H. A. (Harold Arthur) Prichard
Kaushalya .—(From Koshal, the name of a famous Rishi or saint.)
— from The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India, Volume 1 by R. V. (Robert Vane) Russell
So she gave him kiss for kiss, largely believing, largely hoping, that Mrs. Barker was in love with Van Loo and would NOT return.
— from The Three Partners by Bret Harte
The unknown was called yavattavat, and if there were several, the first took this appellation, and the others were designated by the names of colours; for instance, x was denoted by ya and y by ka (from kalaka, black).
— from The Project Gutenberg Encyclopedia Volume 1 of 28 by Project Gutenberg
1. kye ] fatte Kine.
— from The Book of Husbandry by Anthony Fitzherbert
[Note 14: From Shakespeare to Kant, from Kant to Major Dyngwell .
— from Essays of Robert Louis Stevenson Selected and Edited With an Introduction and Notes by William Lyon Phelps by Robert Louis Stevenson
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