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Rubin English

Meaning Rubin meaning

What does Rubin mean?

Rubin

A en given name.

rubin

(obsolete) A ruby.

Synonyms Rubin synonyms

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

rubin English » English

roseine magenta fuchsin

Examples Rubin examples

How do I use Rubin in a sentence?

Movie subtitles

I'm sorry, Mr. Rubin.
How are you doing? Rubin right?
Rubin fired you.
Maybe I should talk to Rubin.
Save the speech, Rubin.
Call Judge Rubin.
I'm Dr. Rubin.
Rubin, I need your final report.
Yeah, what have you got, Rubin?
Hang on a second, will you, Rubin?
Mr. Reede, Rubin and Dunn called.
Dr. Rubin, Psychiatric Unit.
Alan Rubin.
Things slow on the Vice Squad, Rubin, you can go off and play games?
Jon Rubin.
Jon Rubin?
Yes, Jon Rubin. Hi. How are you?
Yes, my name is Jon Rubin, and there seems to be some mistake here.
My name is Jon Rubin, sir, and I just came back from Vietnam.
Captain Edward Rubin, Sheriff, presiding, May 24th.
Rubin!
Rubin! Sergunenkov! Get the scout to the observation post, to Drozdovsky.
Rubin, you keep on torturing horses and Ill find you in hell!
And what's the matter with you, Rubin?
Rubin, take him off there!
Rubin, come with me.
And where's Rubin? Golovanov?
Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin.
You ain't got no more stories, Rubin?
Rubin, man!
Rubin fired you. - What?
Can't we do something? Maybe I should talk to Rubin.
I'm sorry, Mr. Rubin. He got past me.
That was Alan Rubin and his wife in that taxi.
That's where Mrs. Rubin's gonna be, somewhere downtown.
It's their job to save Mrs. Rubin.
Mrs. Rubin?
Mrs. Rubin!
Oh, Coach Rubin.

News and current affairs

Robert Rubin and Kent Conrad warned him that the press would not interpret his testimony as being balanced, and that Congress would interpret it as an excuse to abandon fiscal discipline.
Former US Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin reportedly tried to influence the current government to intervene on behalf of Enron in its hotly contested dispute in India.
The big bailout strategies, associated with the Clinton-era IMF of Michel Camdessus, Stanley Fischer, Larry Summers, and Robert Rubin, failed abysmally.
A number of thoughtful observers - like Citigroup's Robert Rubin, Harvard's Larry Summers, and The Financial Times's Martin Wolf - have expressed puzzlement in recent months about financial markets' perceptions of risk.
Don't get me wrong: somewhat more than half my brain agrees with Rubin, Summers, Wolf, and company.
The US Treasury under Robert Rubin and Larry Summers was unafraid to join the IMF in betting the store on Mexico, Thailand, Korea, and Brazil when they thought the odds were favorable.
Reading Rubin's recently published memoir In an Uncertain World, we can begin to understand this striking difference better.
Begin by noting that the title page of In an Uncertain World states that its authors are Robert Rubin and Jacob Weisberg.
This is a key facet of Robert Rubin's strength: he is a classy guy, one who believes that credit is to be shared.
Rubin also used the remarkable management skills that he had honed as chairman of the investment bank Goldman Sachs to great effect.
That means that we must make it more likely in the future that people as capable and wise as Robert Rubin will find it attractive to enter public service, and that once there, they will have the power to make a difference.
Of course, the Treasury which Robert Rubin came to lead was vital early on in the Clinton administration in countering the spend-and- tax- happy liberals on the Clinton White House team.
Mr Rubin and his proteges taught the lesson that bond markets are supreme and they succeeded beyond anyone's imagination thus training the White House to that new view.
What, then, is there to fear from Mr. Rubin's departure?
We grew up admiring leaders such as Robert Rubin, John Thain, and Henry Paulson.
The surplus-creating fiscal policies established by Robert Rubin and company in the Clinton administration would have been very good for America had the Clinton administration been followed by a normal successor.
Although hardly a megawatt star of the Bob Rubin category, he certainly brings some positive attributes to the job.
The world can trust Mr. Rubin's long time deputy, the economist Larry Summers, to keep the ship afloat: he knows better than anyone that timely and decisive tax cuts are the way to keep the economy from tumbling.
Mr. Rubin's cool head, advocating such a stance, might well be missed should Japan implode in such a way.

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