maimer


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Related to maimer: took over
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  • noun

Synonyms for maimer

a person who mutilates or destroys or disfigures or cripples

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Yet, until recently, Loftus worked in institutional sales and equity trading, a career that lost its luster with the advent of electronic trading and its impersonal maimer.
It is an important situation for people to have behavioral maimer which is acceptable and enabling positive communication with others.
The most common type of physical discipline was the use of hands in spanking buttocks with 50% of the participants reporting that they were spanked in this maimer "sometimes" or greater.
The intention was to present results in a practical maimer to show trends in current practice, and to clarify what the literature points out as gaps in understanding around the process of diagnosis disclosure.
A wife is chosen based on a number of factors but she must not be related by "close" blood--namely, she cannot be her future husband's sister, a fact that Zilia decries to Deterville when she learns that Aza will not marry her: "Si j'etais etrangere, inconnue, Aza pourrait maimer: unis par les liens du sang, il doit m'abandonner." (14) Conversely, Graffigny's historical introduction explains that the Peruvian family begins with the marital union of brother and sister.
5095, 2009), available at http://www.iadb.org/intal/intalcdi/pe/2009/04268.pdf (explaining that free riders "enjoy the benefit of others' restraint in using shared resources or others' contribution to collective action," but if many individuals decide to free ride in this maimer, "eventually no one contributes" resulting in "collective inaction").
704(b) book income or loss, but with the assumption that the partnership agreement requires that partnership taxable income or Loss be allocated in the same maimer as partnership Sec.
Serbian and Yugoslav Maimer Rifles, by Branko Bagdonovic, $19.95, ISBN 1-88239135-7, North Cape Publicatons, P,O, Box 1027, Tustin, CA 92781, (800) 745-9714, www.northcapepubs.com
This new edition of Daphne du Maimer's 1951 novel is part of Virago's Modern Classics series.
The goal of the current effort is a 50% decrease in energy use in commercial building retrofits under 100.000 ft2 (9.290 m ) in a cost effective (scalable) maimer. While 20-30% improvements can be achieved through improved controls and high efficiency components (CTCS 2005) 50% savings in these spall to medium sized buildings will require technology advances in controls, components, and system integration.
And they're going about it in a strikingly similar maimer.
There is here an administrative tribunal which, in certain respects, is to act in a judicial maimer; and even on the view of the dissenting justices in McGillivray, there is liability: what could be more malicious than to punish this licensee for having done what he had an absolute right to do in a matter utterly irrelevant to the Liquor Act?
In his stories, Lazarevic uses irony in a very complex maimer, and thus presented himself as a sensitive writer (14) who is aware of the illusion of truth, who requests from his readers an active and demanding construction of a picture of double reality: one presented as ideal, and one contrary to that ideal.