severy


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severy

(ˈsɛvərɪ)
n, pl -ries
a bay of a vaulted ceiling
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
(93.) See Severy 2003 and Milnor 2005 on the changing ideologies of the family under the Principate.
Gail Severy, a special education aide in Merrimac, New Hampshire, says inclusion works wonders when districts provide proper training and when teachers and paras receive administrative support.
The content in PASS differs from standards textbooks and workbooks in severy ways: simplified text, smaller units of study, reduced vocabulary level, increased frequency of drill and practice exercises, less cluttered format, and presentation of skills in small, sequential steps.
Severy, Gillette's Social Redemption (Boston, 1907), 367-369, 372-398; Rosen, The Last Sisterhood, 130.
However, other studies have found that consistent condom use by young women is associated with less frequent sexual intercourse (Glor & Severy, 1990; Weisman, Plichta, Nathanson, Ensmigner, & Robinson, 1991).
219 (a) (b) cm of 5 oysters, Texas; Rose & Bodansky (1920) 1,299 (a) (b) cm of 5 oysters, Texas; Bodansky (1920) 150 (a) 850 (a) One eastern oyster; Severy (1923) 109 (b) cm of 9 lots of "white" oysters: Galtsoff & Whipple (1930) 1,954 Mean of 6 "green" oysters; Galtsoff & Whipple (1930) 426 (a) North Atlantic states, winter; Coulson et al.
Furthermore, conservatives have been found to be more punitive than liberals and to be more likely to attribute the defendant's actions to internal than to external causes (Davis, Severy, Kraus, & Whitaker, 1993; Vidmar, 1974).
Eleven questions were selected from the Helping Dispositions Scale (Severy, 1975).