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Hansen English

Meaning Hansen meaning

What does Hansen mean?

Hansen

} of Danish and Norwegian origin. A city in Idaho A town in Wisconsin

Examples Hansen examples

How do I use Hansen in a sentence?

Movie subtitles

Lars Peter Hansen.
Then maybe you could tell me about an Arnst Hansen?
You have a fine daughter, Lars Peter Hansen.
Hansen.
Now you listen here, Hansen.
They took the Hansen who was here before me.
AII shoemakers up north are called Hansen.
I took over Hansen's business when he was arrested.
Can we forget Hansen?
Take care of Hansen right away, and we'II be sure.
Uh, you're Ed Hansen?
As to Mr. Ferguson you have heard his former superior Detective Captain Hansen, from that great city to the north testify as to his character and ability.
Captain Hansen was most enthusiastic.
My name's Karen Hansen. Hansen?
Mrs. Lorna Hansen Forbes.
Ten days have passed and the police still have no clue. as to the whereabouts of the fabulous woman. who chose to call herself Lorna Hansen Forbes.
Boys, Mrs. Lorna Hansen Forbes.
How'd she get the name Lorna Hansen Forbes?
You're Ed Hansen?
My name's Karen Hansen.
Hansen?
Karen Hansen.
The official name now is Hansen's disease.
For two, three years all goes well till the day Father Doonan stumbles on our horrible secret there's Hansen's disease on these islands.
Hansen's disease is kaput.
Ole Hansen is getting a new well.
My name is hansen.
Mrs. Hansen! Quick, to the cellar, there's.
Lucy Hansen, for instance.
As to Mr. Ferguson, you have heard his former superior, Detective Captain Hansen, from that great city to the north, testify as to his character and ability.
This is Commander Hansen.
We're minutes away, Hansen.
Confirm what hit you, Hansen.
You're visual, Hansen.
Warp factor 1, Mr. Hansen.
Hold your course, Mr. Hansen. - Aye, aye, sir.
Steady as she goes, Mr. Hansen.
I see you're up, Mr. Hansen.

News and current affairs

Hansen promised to brave arrest at what was billed as the world's largest direct-action climate change protest.
Hansen predicted that capitalism would suffer from a permanent underinvestment crisis.
Those who know their history will recognize that Summers is reviving an argument advanced by the American economist Alvin Hansen in 1938.
The prolonged boom that followed World War II falsified Hansen's projection.
In the 1930's, the economist Alvin Hansen argued that opportunities for new investment in already-rich countries were drying up.
In today's crisis, muddling through would be a recipe for a continuation of the crisis and secular stagnation of the type once described by Alvin Hansen, a contemporary of Keynes.
The disease is caused by a bacillus called Myobacterium leprae, first identified in 1873 by G.H. Armauer Hansen.
Hansen thought that new inventions would require less capital than in the past.
Hansen suggests that there will eventually be sea-level rises of 24 meters (80 feet), with a six-meter rise happening just this century.
Hansen is not alone in trying to blame others for his message's becoming harder to sell.
Gore and Hansen want a moratorium on coal-fired power plants, but neglect the fact that the hundreds of new power plants that will be opened in China and India in the coming years could lift a billion people out of poverty.
The name comes from the number of parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that, according to Jim Hansen, perhaps the world's leading climate scientist, we should not exceed if we are to avoid potentially catastrophic climate change.
But I would never want to shut down discussion about these issues - whether it is with Gore, Hansen, or Krugman.

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