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Cargill: Creating a more food secure world
Cargill is a family company providing food, ingredients, agricultural solutions and industrial products to nourish the world.
www.cargill.com
www.cargill.com
Gargil Definition & Meaning | YourDictionary
Gargil definition: A distemper in geese, affecting the head.
www.yourdictionary.com
www.yourdictionary.com
Gargil - The Free Dictionary
A distemper in geese, affecting the head. Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co. Want to thank TFD for ...
www.thefreedictionary.com
www.thefreedictionary.com
gargil, n.¹ meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
This word is now obsolete. It is last recorded around the early 1700s. Entry status. OED is undergoing a continuous programme of revision to modernize and ...
www.oed.com
www.oed.com
Gargil Family History - FamilySearch
Gargil Name Meaning. Altered form of Garrigus , a surname of French origin (see Garrigues ). History: Bearers of the surname Gargis are ...
www.familysearch.org
www.familysearch.org
gargil - definition and meaning - Wordnik
gargil: A distemper in geese, which affects the head and often proves fatal.
www.wordnik.com
www.wordnik.com
GARGLE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
to move a liquid around in your throat without swallowing, especially to clean it or stop it feeling painful
dictionary.cambridge.org
dictionary.cambridge.org
gargil - Yorkshire Historical Dictionary
1) A disease in cattle, sheep and pigs which affects the head and throat. 1608 that no man nor woman put to the coman ane infected horses or stonde horses or ...
yorkshiredictionary.york.ac.uk
yorkshiredictionary.york.ac.uk
Gargil Family History - Ancestry.com
The Gargil family name was found in Scotland in 1871. In 1871 there were 2 Gargil families living in Renfrewshire. This was 100% of all the recorded Gargil's in ...
www.ancestry.com
www.ancestry.com
gargil, n.² meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
The earliest known use of the noun gargil is in the early 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for gargil is from 1601, in a translation by Philemon Holland, ...
www.oed.com
www.oed.com
Sisters Servants of Mary Immaculate
The Superior General at that time, Mother Veronica Gargil, was able to flee the Soviet Union with another member of the General Council, first to Czechoslovakia
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
gargyse
† gargyse Obs. rare. [Cf. garget, gargil.] A disease in cattle (see quot.).1577 B. Googe Heresbach's Husb. 136 b, The Gargyse is a swelling beside the eye vppon the bone, like a botch, or a byle: yf your Bullocke haue it [etc.]. So 1741 Compl. Fam.-Piece iii. 477.
Oxford English Dictionary
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