Do we say pseud or sued

pseud 18207 occurrences

THE DARKNESS AT WINDON MANOR, by Max Brand [pseud. of Frederick Faust] (In Argosy magazine)

R67209, 18Sep50, Eleanor Bowie Turner (C) EUROPE AND ELSEWHERE, by Mark Twain [pseud. of Samuel L. Clemens] with an appreciation by Brandar Matthews and an introd.

GOLD KING TURNS HIS BACK, by John Frederick [pseud. of Frederick Faust] (In Western story magazine) © Dorothy Faust (W) Apr. 28, 1923 issue.

BARNES, NANCY, pseud.

BAUM, VICKI, pseud.

The invincible slave owners, by Isak Dinesen. pseud.

BOUCHER, ANTHONY, pseud.

SEE HARDT, MICHAEL, pseud.

BROWN, ZENITH. Siren in the night, by Leslie Ford, pseud.

Alberta T. Burk (W); 19Jun70; R488057. BURKE, NOEL, pseud.

The female of the fruit fly, by William March, pseud.

She died a lady, by Carter Dickson, pseud.

CATRISAND, RENE, pseud.

Norma Oliver, pseud.

SEE Coles, Manning, pseud.

SEE Coles, Manning, pseud.

Edited by Anthony Boucher, pseud.

Phantom lady, by William Irish, pseud.

The promise fulfilled; received by Helen Wells, by Norma Oliver, pseud.

<pb id='003.png' /> Little Bobo and his blue jacket, by Tony Brice, pseud.

BAUM, VICKI, pseud.

Almost human, by Tanleton Fiske, pseud.

Robert Bloch (A); 18Feb71; R501214. Fairy tale, by Tanleton Fiske, pseud.

Robert Bloch (A); 18Feb71; R501217. <pb id='022.png' n='1971h1/A/1548' /> Mystery of the creeping underwear, by Tanleton Fiske, pseud.

Skeleton in the closet, by Tanleton Fiske, pseud.

sued 221 occurrences

But the third request she proffers boldly "without any condition," since it was necessarily God's desire to grant it and to be sued for it; namely, the grace of a three-fold wound: the wound of true sorrow for sin; the wound of "kind compassion" with Christ's sufferings; and the wound of "wilful belonging to God," that is, of self-devotion.

Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Turkey sued for peace.

During the interim between the delivery and the acceptance of the Austrian Armistice and the surrender of Austria, the Versailles Council prepared terms of an armistice that had been sued for by the German government.

" Under the burden of this imputed ignominy, was it remarkable that I faltered in my own piece immediately following? "The Warrior bowed his crested head, and tamed his heart of fire, And sued the haughty King to free his long imprisoned sire.

The power and spirit of the Creeks was broken, and even the haughty Weatherford sued for peace.

To be sure, he hadn't said nothin' to me in round words; I couldn't ha' sued him; but he'd looked and acted enough; and now,dear me!

Forty of them lie together in a barn, yet are never sued upon the Statute of Inmates.

One creditor bolder than the rest sued him and foreclosed; then others were encouraged to attack the ruined man.

About a month after his arrival, a Zemindar of Kadampur, named Debendra Chandra Mitra, sued one of his ryots for ejectment in the local Múnsiff's Court.

Mr. M. Dousman (April 10) writes that a knave has worried him, dogged his heels away from home, and sued him, at unawares.

He sued Joe, and recovered damages, for which he ordered the sheriff to seize his pig.

Rothschild, the late banker, though the richest private citizen in the world, and perhaps master of scores of English servants, who sued for the smallest crumbs of his favor, was, as a subject of the government, inferior to the lowest among them.

The supreme court of Louisiana, in their decision, in the case of Crawford vs. Cherry,(15, Martin's La. Rep. 112; also "Law of Slavery," 249,) where the defendant was sued for the value of a slave whom he had shot and killed, say, "The act charged here, is one rarely committed in the presence of witnesses," (whites).

He then advanced to Vitoria, within twenty leagues of Caracas, where he was met by Spanish commissioners, who sued for, and obtained, a capitulation.

In consequence of this disaster, the factory sued for peace, but the Rajah's terms were so humiliating that they were rejected, and it was decided to await further reinforcements from Bombay; but two months elapsed before their arrival.

The difficulty of doing so was obvious, as the witnesses were all under Matthews' command; so the charge was dropped, and the Directors sued him in the Court of Exchequer for infringing their charter by private trading.

Suffice it to say that Kent, then local attorney for the company, mastered them; and when Mrs. Varnum, through Hawk, her counsel, sued for five thousand dollars damages, he was able to get a continuance, knowing from long experience that the jury would certainly find for the plaintiff if the case were then allowed to go to trial.

Various considerations will make it clear that women who sued had, in practice, complete disposal of the matter.

" Quintilian mentions several cases of women being sued; Pliny tells how he acted as attorney for some; and the Law Books will supply any one curious in the matter with abundant examples.

She could hold land, make a will or contract, could sue and be sued, all of her own initiative; she needed no guardian.

A succession of these blows completely humbled the Cherokees, and they sued for peace; thanks to Sevier's tactics, they had suffered more loss than they had inflicted, an almost unknown thing in these wars with the forest Indians.

Loyalist creditors found it impossible to recover their debts in America, while they were themselves sued in the British courts by their American creditors, and their property was still being confiscated by the American legislatures.

Dr. Cheever's pamphlet, "Deacon Giles' Distillery," was scattered far and wide, and, as he was sued for libel, the question was discussed in the courts as well as at every fireside.

BRUCE, ROBERT, son of the preceding, earl of Carrick, through Marjory his wife; served under Edward at the battle of Dunbar for one instance; sued for the Scottish crown in vain (1269-1304).

Under this statute, which was passed in 1894, the Trade Unions of the Colony have been given the right to become corporate bodies able to sue and be sued.

Do we say   pseud   or  sued