darre


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darre

(dɛə)
vb
an archaic spelling of dare
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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(76.) Venkitanarayanan, K., Kollanoor-Johny, A., Darre, M.J., Donoghue, A.M., Dono-ghue, D.J.
Fuse president and CEO Jean-Francois Darre said access to GCredit would be determined by the GScore which shows the financial capacity of an individual to pay back a credit based on his or her GCash usage.
(From L-R) GCat, Fuse Head of Lending, Kim Seng, Mynt President and CEO Anthony Thomas, Mynt Chief Data and Risk Officer and CEO of Fuse Lending Jean Francois Darre and Product Manager Myles Salud
Asi, si bien no hay mucho de novedoso en el hecho de que hubiera toda una serie de saberes, discursos y dispositivos dirigidos a que los padres (y mas aun, las madres) cumplieran con sus responsabilidades y obligaciones respecto de los ninos (Nari, 2004; Darre, 2013), si se instalo una nueva concepcion relativa a cuales deberan ser esas responsabilidades.
bnte do be spac patien Darre " Darren Millar AM, speaking in the Welsh Assembly this week,said: "This appears to be a significant problem in North Wales which, clearly, people wil want to have addressed prior to the very cold weather that may come over the winter period.
Although the phrase predates Hitler, it quickly became a Nazi slogan, popularized by Richard Walther Darre, the Nazi minister of food and agriculture.
Peres, Ana Claudia Darre, Mariana Ortiz Ribeiro, Yara Juliana, Marcelo Furia Cesar, Rachel Cesar de Almeida Santos.
Scheifele, P.M., Andrew, S., Cooper, R.A., Darre, M., Musiek, F.E., and Max, L.
(8) That none of youre officers roialle, nethir hir debitees or commissioneris, shalle darre..to take no bribe (c1475(?cl451) Bk.Noblesse (Roy 18.B.22) 72)
Although this early antiSemitic screed reached thousands of readers at the cusp of the new republic, the author fails to mention books by three other racist authors, with an immeasurably greater impact on the German public in the second half of the 1920s, when the Nazis were gathering strength: Paul Schultze-Naumburg, Richard Walther Darre, and, of signal importance, Hans F.