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Moore English

Meaning Moore meaning

What does Moore mean?

Moore

British sculptor whose works are monumental organic forms (1898-1986) Irish poet who wrote nostalgic and patriotic verse (1779-1852) United States poet noted for irony and wit (1887-1872) English philosopher (1873-1958) English actor and comedian who appeared on television and in films (born in 1935) United States composer of works noted for their use of the American vernacular (1893-1969)

Synonyms Moore synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Moore?

moore English » English

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Examples Moore examples

How do I use Moore in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Charles Moore created Forth in an attempt to increase programmer productivity without sacrificing machine efficiency.

Movie subtitles

Diz Moore, poet of Washington correspondents.
This is Mr Moore, member of the press.
Chuck, here's a grand from Moore.
Sir George and Lady Moore.
Sam Moore.
Yes, Mrs. Moore, I've got to hurry back.
Well, we wanna ask you have you ever been in the offices of the Associated Life of New York in the Victor Moore Arcade building?
You've been identified by witnesses as the man who held up the offices of Associated Life in the Victor Moore Arcade building.
He has an office nearby, in the Victor Moore Arcade.
I would like to see Brogan-Moore here as soon as he comes in from court.
You'll like Brogan-Moore, he's had excellent training.
Ah, Brogan-Moore.
You know Mr. Mayhew, Mr. Brogan-Moore.
This is Mr. Brogan-Moore.
Oh, thank you, Miss Moore.
Good night, Miss Moore.
Is Miss Moore in?
My dear Miss Moore this story grows more and more charming.
You disappoint me, Miss Moore.
This nonsense about Miss Moore at the park and in the swimming pool it's a deterioration of the mind, escape into fantasy.
Miss Moore?
I have the porter as you asked and the railroad company's sent Mr. Moore to unlock cars.
Mr. Johnson, Mr. Clay and Mr. Moore.
I'm Lucy Moore.
Guess again, Miss Moore.
Lucy Moore.
The second preliminary on tomorrow night's card is a four-round bop between Slug McNut and Jerry Moore.
How Moore got on the card at all is a mystery.
Lefty landed a light left hook to the stomach and Moore promptly dropped on his back.
Moore is sure taking them, McCloskey leads again.
Moore holding on for dear life.
There goes the bell saving Mr Jerry Moore at the end of the second round.
Moore leads with a left to the head, not much steam behind his punches.
McCloskey counters with a left jab trying to get set with that deadly right He lets it go and it lands on the point of Jerry Moore's chin.
My dear Miss Moore. this story grows more and more charming.

News and current affairs

It provided rich-country governments and then-WTO Director General Mike Moore with an opportunity to gain the moral high ground over anti-globalization protesters.
Both sides cite Moore's Law, named for Intel's co-founder, Gordon Moore, who noticed that the density of transistors on a chip could be doubled every 18 months.
The setting is a downtown restaurant to which the editor Tina Brown has invited Hillary Clinton and a handful of notables, including Caroline Kennedy, filmmaker Michael Moore, and former Senator George McGovern.
The most familiar case concerning the body as property is that of John Moore, a patient who developed hairy cell leukemia and had his spleen removed at the UCLA School of Medicine in 1976.
Moore became suspicious when UCLA cancer specialists kept taking samples of his blood, bone marrow, skin and sperm for seven years.
When Moore discovered in 1984 that he had become patent number 4,438,032, he sued for malpractice and property theft.
His physician claimed that Moore had waived his interest in his body parts by signing a general consent form.
But Moore felt that his integrity was violated, his body exploited, and his tissue turned into a product.
The Court held that clinicians must inform patients in advance of surgery that their tissue could be used for research, but denied Moore's claim.
John Moore's experience suggests that the commercial interests of doctors can encourage them to take more tissue than needed for their patients' benefit.
The field could provide an avenue, alongside 3D silicon chips, for maintaining - or even accelerating - the pace of Moore's Law, which states that the number of transistors on the integrated circuits used by computers doubles every two years.
We know that from such cases as that of John Moore, who tried unsuccessfully to claim property rights in a valuable cell line developed from his immune cells.
But, as the investigative journalist Thomas J. Moore reported in his book Deadly Medicine, at the peak of their use, these drugs were killing more Americans each year than were killed during the entire Vietnam War.

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