- article, Key said in the indictment, "was
intended to injure, oppress,
aggrieve, and
vilify the good name, fame,
credit & re****tion of the Magistrates...
- 1998 "Page Title". Brennan, 2000 "A
statement of the
penal laws
which aggrieve the
Catholics of Ireland : With commentaries ; in two parts". 1812. O'Leary...
-
person any
poison or
destructive or
noxious thing with
intent to injure,
aggrieve or annoy, or
attempting to do so,
after deliberately altering prescriptions...
- grav-
heavy Latin gravis aggravate, aggravation, aggravative, aggravator,
aggrieve, aggrievement, degravation, gravamen, grave, gravid, gravida, gravidity...
- Moreover,
although Anderson and Knox
offered eight specific plans to
aggrieve the ****anese
Empire and added, "If by
these means ****an
could be led to...
- not fall
under fault-free food that Jain
monks must
consume as it
might aggrieve the
householder they
accept food from.
Becoming the
medium for a householder's...
-
commission of a
crime Administration of
poison with
intent to injure,
aggrieve or
annoy any
person Affray Arson ****ault with
intent to rape ****ault with...
- aggrandi****t Fr. agrandis****t
aggravation aggression,
compare agression aggrieve, (Old Fr. agrever,
compare modern Fr. aggraver)
agile agility à gogo, or...
- متأثر müte'essir müteessir üzüntülü sad (person) From the root üz– "to
aggrieve." متفكر mütefekkir mütefekkir düşünür thinker,
intellectual From the root...
- grav-
heavy Latin gravis aggravate, aggravation, aggravative, aggravator,
aggrieve, aggrievement, degravation, gravamen, grave, gravid, gravida, gravidity...