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"mazard" Definitions
  1. HEAD, FACE

18 Sentences With "mazard"

How to use mazard in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "mazard" and check conjugation/comparative form for "mazard". Mastering all the usages of "mazard" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Barlow is a former Department of Justice Antitrust Division trial attorney and current partner at Doyle, Barlow, and Mazard.
"I don't doubt that there will be a lot of people that will be concerned about such a huge deal," said Andre Barlow of the law firm Doyle, Barlow and Mazard.
"I don't think it is a great idea to get into all of this (allegations of White House interference) because every deal raises different facts," said Andre Barlow of Doyle, Barlow & Mazard PLLC.
The merger of two market leaders such as FanDuel and DraftKings would usually attract the attention of antitrust authorities, said Andre Barlow, an antitrust expert with the law firm Doyle, Barlow and Mazard PLLC.
Andre Barlow, an antitrust lawyer at the law firm Doyle, Barlow and Mazard, said the government may worry about whether other cable and internet companies would continue to have access to Time Warner content like HBO and CNN.
With the government's request for final approval of the merger, Leon may sign off on the deal with no further ado or may decide to hold a hearing to allow critics to raise their concerns, said Andre Barlow of the law firm Doyle, Barlow and Mazard, an antitrust expert who has been following the case.
And now my Lady Worm's, chapless and knocked about the mazard with a sexton's spade.
When he leaves, Wanley stops at the portrait and meets Reed, who is standing near the painting watching people gaze at it. Reed convinces Wanley to join her for drinks. Later, they go to Reed's home, but an unexpected visit from her rich clandestine lover Claude Mazard, known to Reed initially only as 'Frank Howard', leads to a fight in which Wanley kills Mazard. Wanley and Reed conspire to cover up the murder, and Wanley disposes of Mazard's body in the country.
Collardelle and Mazard, pp.71, 78; Jansen, p.195; Kaufmann and Kaufmann, p.110. This form of castle was closely associated with the colonisation of newly cultivated areas within the Empire, as new lords were granted lands by the emperor and built castles close to the local gród, or town.Collardelle and Mazard, pp.71, 78; Jansen, p.195; Kaufmann and Kaufmann, p.110.. Motte-and-bailey castle building substantially enhanced the prestige of local nobles, and it has been suggested that their early adoption was because they were a cheaper way of imitating the more prestigious Höhenburgen built on high ground, but this is usually regarded as unlikely.
Mazard, Eisel (2010). "The Buddha was bald," New Mandala. The Buddha is also described as being handsome and with a clear complexion (Digha I:115; Anguttara I:181), at least in his youth. In old age, however, he is described as having a stooped body, with slack and wrinkled limbs.
The town's Punic name (, probably pronounced "Kirthan", with a hard, breathy /tʰ/ sound) is probably not the Punic word meaning "town", which was written with a Q (i.e., qoph) rather than a K (kaph).Mazard, Corpus, n° 523-529. Instead, it is likely a Punic transcription of an existing Berber placename.. This was later Latinized as Cirta.
By the 12th century, the castles in Western Germany began to thin in number, due to changes in land ownership, and various mottes were abandoned.Collardelle and Mazard, p.79. In Germany and Denmark, motte-and-bailey castles also provided the model for the later wasserburg, or "water castle", a stronghold and bailey construction surrounded by water, and widely built in the late medieval period.Jansen, p.197.
The presence of some "Sittians" (Latin sittiani), former followers of Sittius, among the allied forces of Arabio and Confucius suggests that they perhaps remained in control of the late mercenary's principality, including Cirta. Jean Mazard proposed in 1955 that two series of very rare coins belonged to Masinissa II and Arabio, but Gabriel Camps has argued that they more properly belong to the Mauretanian king Mastanesosus.
35; Collardelle and Mazard, pp.72-3. Yet another theory suggests that the design emerged as a result of the pressures of space on ringworks and that the earliest motte-and-baileys were converted ringworks.King (1991), p.37. Finally, there may be a link between the local geography and the building of motte-and-bailey castles, which are usually built on low-lying areas, in many cases subject to regular flooding.
This root is the equivalent of the Numidian root mess, "leader", which is in turn the root of the name of Arabio's father, Masinissa. It was first proposed by the numismatist Jean Mazard in 1955 that Arabio's given name was the same as that of his father and that Roman authors referred to him merely by the Punic form with which they were more familiar. The Numidian and Punic languages belong to the Berber and Semitic branches of the Afro-Asiatic language family, respectively.
Statue at Elephant and Castle intersection in London. A derived symbol used in Europe is the "elephant and castle": an elephant carrying a castle on its back, being used especially to symbolize strength. The symbol was used in Europe in classical antiquity and more recently has been used in England since the 13th century, and in Denmark since at least the 17th century. In antiquity, the Romans made use of war elephants, and turreted elephants feature on the coinage of Juba II of Numidia, in the 1st century BC.J. Mazard, Corpus Nummorum Numidiae Mauretaniaeque (Paris 1955) 103, nº.
Laurent Grimod de La Reynière (11 February 1734 – 26 December 1793) was a French financier and fermier général. He was the son of Antoine-(Gaspard) Grimod, seigneur de La Reynière (1690 – 9 February 1754), another fermier général, and his third wife Marie-Madeleine Mazard (28 May 1716 – 23 February 1773), of whom a pastel portrait was executed by Maurice-(Quentin) de La Tour in 1751. He was the husband of Françoise-(Elisabeth) de Jarente (the niece of the bishop of Orléans), whom he married on 1 February 1753. They were the parents of the famous French gastronome and author Alexandre Balthazar Laurent Grimod de La Reynière (1758–1837).
Nossov, p. 30. Since the late 1940s, a strand of scholarship has argued that the African forest elephants used by Numidia, the Ptolemies and the military of Carthage did not carry howdahs or turrets in combat, perhaps owing to the physical weakness of the species.Scullard (1948); (1974) 240–245 Some allusions to turrets in ancient literature are certainly anachronistic or poetic invention, but other references are less easily discounted. There is explicit contemporary testimony that the army of Juba I of Numidia included turreted elephants in 46 BC.Caesar, De Bello Africo 30.2, 41.2, 86.1. This is confirmed by the image of a turreted African elephant used on the coinage of Juba II.J. Mazard, Corpus Nummorum Numidiae Mauretaniaeque (Paris 1955) 103, no.

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