Anna shaw


anna howard, 1847–1919, u.s. physician, reformer, and suffragist, born in england.
artie (arthur arshawsky) 1910–2004, u.s. clarinetist and bandleader.
george bernard, 1856–1950, irish dramatist, critic, and novelist: n-bel prize 1925.
henry wheeler, .
irwin, 1913–84, u.s. dramatist and author.
richard norman, 1831–1912, english architect, born in scotland.
thomas edward, .
historical examples

let dr. anna shaw enter the same field and she will gather blossoms of thought faster than you can store them away in your mind.
wit, humor, reason, rhetoric, prose, poetry and story woven into eight popular lectures george w. bain

then turning to anna shaw, she said with emotion, “i think it is the most beautiful monument in the whole world.”
susan b. anthony alma lutz

anna shaw said that in all her years of preaching and lecturing she had never been so exhausted as at the close of that canv-ss.
the life and work of susan b. anthony (volume 2 of 2) ida husted harper

another large apartment was appropriated to rev. anna shaw and her secretary.
the life and work of susan b. anthony (volume 2 of 2) ida husted harper

rev. anna shaw spoke every night during the campaign, except the one month when she returned east to fill engagements.
the life and work of susan b. anthony (volume 2 of 2) ida husted harper

noun
(archaic or dialect) a small wood; thicket; copse
verb
to show
noun
a show
the part of a potato plant that is above ground
noun
artie, original name arthur arshawsky. 1910–2004, us jazz clarinetist, band leader, and composer
george bernard, often known as gbs. 1856–1950, irish dramatist and critic, in england from 1876. he was an active socialist and became a member of the fabian society but his major works are effective as satiric attacks rather than political tracts. these include arms and the man (1894), candida (1894), man and superman (1903), major barbara (1905), pygmalion (1913), back to methuselah (1921), and st joan (1923): n-bel prize for literature 1925
richard norman. 1831–1912, english architect
thomas edward. the name -ssumed by (t. e.) lawrence after 1927
n.

“strip of wood forming the border of a field,” 1570s, from old english sceaga “copse,” cognate with north frisian skage “farthest edge of cultivated land,” old norse skage “promontory,” and perhaps with old english sceaga “rough matted hair” (see sh-g (n.)). the old english word also is the source of the surname shaw (attested from late 12c.) and its related forms.

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