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credent
credent, a. (n.) rare. (ˈkriːdənt) 1. Believing, trustful, confiding.1602 Shakes. Ham. i. iii. 30 If with too credent eare you list his Songs. 1800 Sir P. Francis in Parr's Wks. (1828) VII. 194 All my credent faculties desert me..when I am called upon to believe [etc.]. 1867 J. B. Rose tr. æneid 247...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Credence (statistics)
Given that Alice is 90% credent, this level of belief can be expressed as gambling odds in the following ways:
90% credence
1 / 9 fractional odds (1
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miscredent
† misˈcredent Obs. [Alteration of miscreant after L. crēdent-em (see credent). Cf. It. miscredente.] = miscreant n.1480 Robt. Deuyll (1827) 49 The myscredaunte Sarasyns. 1577 Stanyhurst Descr. Irel. in Holinshed (1808) VI. 36 A dungeon appointed for offendors and miscredents. 1847 Halliwell, Miscred...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Angelo (Measure for Measure)
Yet reason dares her no;
For my authority bears of a credent bulk,
That no particular scandal once can touch
But it confounds the breather.
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cojoin
† cojoin obs. variant of conjoin v.1590 T. Watson Eglogue on Walsingham Poems (Arb.) 173 Yet all in one coioind doe all excell. 1611 Shakes. Wint. T. i. ii. 143 Then 'tis very credent, Thou may'st coioyne with something.
Oxford English Dictionary
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unmastered
unˈmastered, ppl. a. (un-1 8.)1561 Norton & Sackv. Gorboduc ii. ii, Great is the daunger of vnmaistred might. 1593 Sidney's Arcadia iv. Wks. 1922 II. 107 The unmastred vertu of Pyrocles. 1602 Shakes. Ham. i. iii. 32 If with too credent eare you list his Songs;..or your chast Treasure open To his vnm...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Dauda Lawal
Lawal alongside he very old friend Munir Umaru Baba started Credent Capital and Advisory Limited, they launched it with an initial Capital base of $500
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breather
breather (ˈbriːðə(r)) [f. breathe v. + -er1.] 1. He who, or that which, breathes; one who lives, a living being, creature, animal.c 1600 Shakes. Sonn. lxxxi, When all the breathers of this world are dead. 1606 ― Ant. & Cl. iii. iii. 24 She shewes a body, rather then a life, A Statue, then a Breather...
Oxford English Dictionary
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undertake
▪ I. † ˈundertake, n. Obs. [f. next.] An undertaking, enterprise.1647 Sprigge Anglia Rediv. iv. ix. 295 The spoyle of the Castle, which cannot be avoyded in extreame undertakes against it. 1676 Doctrine of Devils To Rdr., I shall say no more in vindication of the undertake.▪ II. undertake, v. (ʌndəˈ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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non-
▪ I. non-, prefix (nɒn) (also 4–6 noun-, noon-, 5 nom-, 5–6 nowne-, 5–7 none-, often written separate), used to express negation. One of the great formative elements in English. The earlier formations were either directly adopted from, or modelled upon, Anglo-French compounds in noun- = OF. non-, no...
Oxford English Dictionary
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