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gubbins
gubbins, n. pl. (ˈgʌbɪnz) Also gubbings. Rarely sing. [var. of gobbon.] 1. Fragments, esp. of fish; fish-parings. In later use (also const. sing.), trash; anything of little value; a gadget, thingummy. In sing., a fragment. Also fig. and attrib.1553 Respublica i. i. 40 in Brandl Dramas (1898) 286 Th...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Gubbins
Gubbins is a surname. Gubbins (born 1937), British-born American chemical engineer
Martin Gubbins (1812–1863), British official in India
Nathaniel Gubbins (1893–1976), British
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Technical Gubbins / Site Update - Page 39
Anthropic might be interested in this (they're proper ethical AI types from ... Sorry, not sure I follow: share what? Do Amazon not have a big investment in ...
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Nathaniel Gubbins
Nathaniel Gubbins (1893–1976), born Norman Gubbins, was a British journalist and humorist. Nathaniel aka Norman Gubbins is not to be confused with an earlier writer known as Nathaniel Gubbins, Edward Spencer Mott (1844-1910), author of Cakes
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Colin Gubbins
Early life
Gubbins was born in Japan on 2 July 1896, the younger son and third child of John Harington Gubbins (1852–1929), Oriental Secretary at the British Gubbins was appointed as his replacement.
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Ralph Gubbins
Ralph Grayham Gubbins (31 January 1932 – 11 September 2011) was an English professional footballer who played as an inside forward. Gubbins made nearly 250 appearances in the Football League for three clubs between 1952 and 1964, before playing non-league football.
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Martin Gubbins
Three brothers were also in British India: John Panton Gubbins the eldest, Charles and Frederick Bebb Gubbins. Gubbins accompanied Campbell's forces to Kanpur. In poor health, Gubbins then sailed back to England.
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David Gubbins
David Gubbins (born May 31, 1947) is a British former geophysicist concerned with the mechanism of the Earth's magnetic field and theoretical geophysics Career
Gubbins graduated as a geophysicist from Trinity College, Cambridge University in 1968 and received his Ph.D. in 1972.
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John Gubbins
John Russell Gubbins (16 December 1838 – 20 March 1906) was an Irish racehorse owner and breeder. Life
Gubbins was born in 1838 at the family home, Kilfrush in County Limerick, the fourth son of Joseph Gubbins and his wife Maria, daughter of Thomas
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Joe Gubbins
On 6 October 2020, Gubbins joined National League South side Oxford City on a one month loan deal. On 27 November 2021, Gubbins joined National League side Aldershot Town on a one-month loan deal.
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George Gubbins
George Gubbins (born December 8, 1935, in Hamilton, Ontario) is a Canadian retired jockey. References
Montreal Gazette - August 24, 1961 article on George Gubbins
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - October 14, 1961 article on George Gubbins
1935
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Beatrice Gubbins
For many years Dunkathiel House was the home of the five Gubbins sisters, all of whom were deaf, Gubbins received treatment for this in London in 1912 Gubbins died at Dunkathel on 12 August 1944, and is buried on Little Island.
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Gubbins band
The Gubbins band is depicted in Charles Kingsley's novel Westward Ho!. They also appear in the novel Warleigh by Anna Eliza Bray. External links
Legendary Dartmoor: The Gubbins' (sic) of Lydford
English outlaws
Outlaw gangs
People from the Borough of West Devon
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Tommy Gubbins
Tommy Gubbins (7 July 1907 – 23 September 1976) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Essendon in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Before being recruited by the Bombers, Gubbins played in Williamstown CYMS's 1928 premiership side.
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John Gaspard Gubbins
Undeterred, Gubbins and his patrons immediately started on a new collection which eventually became the Gubbins Library and the nucleus of Johannesburg's Works
Raven's fire: a novel by John Gaspard Gubbins (2013)
Profound river - John Gaspard Gubbins (2011)
Three-dimensional thinking - John Gaspard Gubbins
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