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clientship
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clientship
clientship (ˈklaɪənt-ʃɪp) [see -ship.] State or relation of a client: the correlative of patronage.1649 C. Walker Hist. Indep. ii. 145 Their Nomenclators, their Prehensations, Invitations, Clientships. 1697 Dryden Virgil Ded., Patronage and Clientship always descended from the Fathers to the Sons. 1...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Hospitium
, however, occur of the establishment of public hospitality between two cities (Rome and Caere, Livy v. 50), and of towns entering into a position of clientship
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Bóaire
He would normally have cattle given to him by a lord in exchange for entering into a clientship relationship.
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clientele
clientele (klaɪənˈtiːl, -ˈtɛl, kliːɒnˈtɛl) Also 8–9 -el, 9 -elle, and in Fr. form clientèle. [ad. L. clientēla the relation of client, clientship, a body of clients, f. client-em client. This seems to have been taken immediately from Latin in the 16th c., to have become obs. in the 17th (it is noted...
Oxford English Dictionary
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patronage
▪ I. patronage, n. (ˈpætrənɪdʒ) [a. F. patronage (14th c. in Hatz.-Darm.) = It. patronaggio, in med.L. patrōnāticum, -āgium, f. L. patrōn-us patron: see -age.] The office or action of a patron: in various senses of the word. 1. Eccl. The right of presenting a qualified person to an ecclesiastical be...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Recruiter election
suggested that the recruiter elections during the period of the Civil War led to the change in character of elections from an Elizabethan model based on clientship
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fosterage
fosterage (ˈfɒstərɪdʒ) Also 7 fosteridge. [f. as prec. + -age.] 1. The action, also the office or charge, of fostering or bringing up (another's child).1614 Raleigh Hist. World i. (1634) 182 Some one or other adjoyning to this Lake, had the charge and fosteridge of this childe. 1828 Scott F.M. Perth...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Alexis Kagame
Kagame studies portrayed a pre-colonial Rwandese society in which ubuhake cattle clientship created a harmonious society that allows easy social mobility
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scot
▪ I. scot, n.2 (skɒt) Also 3–4 scoth, 4 scott, 5–6 scotte, 6 skot(t, skotte. [Ultimately identical with OE. sc(e)ot, ᵹesc(e)ot shot n.; its formal relation to this is somewhat uncertain. There can be little doubt that ME. scot is in part of Scandinavian origin, a. ON. skot; but in some instances it ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Tutsi
Before 1962, they regulated and controlled Rwandan society, which was composed of Tutsi aristocracy and Hutu commoners, utilizing a clientship structure
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Geoffroi Jacques Flach
gradually monopolized the various functions in the state; how society modelled on antiquity disappeared; and how the only living organisms were vassalage and clientship
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Hegemony
With few exceptions, the Roman treaties with client states (foedera) were formulized on equal terms without any expression of clientship and the Romans
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Ranchi
The Ranchi Master Plan 2037 was created by a private consultant firm under the clientship of the Ranchi Municipal Corporation, Urban Development and Housing
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Wealth in people
urbanization affects the strategies of Kpelle women and men to gain power an influence by binding themselves to their superiors through ties of marriage, clientship
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Priscilla Reining
In the traditional structure, the land formed the base or medium through which the institution of clientship was expressed and some land is still held
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