We would not have lost as much ships if we had sent the entire fleet, and we would have destroyed the confederates for good! |
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He goes on publishing the book and as many of his confederates as choose to go into the conspiracy do so, and they rear families in affluence. |
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As an example, I was given a drug dealer who spoke to his confederates about consignments of marmalade. |
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His first move was to return to England and there gather confederates to assist him in the scheme. |
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The second step taken by the plaintiff was to commence a separate action against Mr. Tanev and his confederates in the cheque-kiting scheme. |
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Yet, the party is crawling with confederates, anti-semites and anti-immigrant haters. |
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This political configuration is no more than a gossamer ideal whose formation neither he nor his MMI confederates seriously espouse or actively promote. |
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If I was involved in an undertaking with a thousandth as much at stake, I would want to look my confederates in the eye to see how they reacted to what I said. |
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It follows that awareness that one of D's confederates might commit murder is sufficient to convict D as an accomplice, with a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment. |
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When the trooper or watchman shows up, they'll ply him with steak Tartare while their confederates make a getaway. |
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Certainly his confessions might still be reliable, along with the confessions of Abu Zubaydah and other confederates being interrogated in secret. |
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His confederates steal the horse in question from a jailer who is keeping it for evidence and substitute it with another animal painted to look identical. |
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And if any one rebels against a verdict, and, in consequence of his obstinacy, any one of the confederates is injured, all the confederates are bound to compel the culprit to give satisfaction. |
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By getting one of the perpetrators to squeal on his confederates. |
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But a promise of French help quickly forced the confederates to come to terms. |
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Pickelherring and his confederates wore clown costumes that have hardly changed to this day: oversized shoes, waistcoats, and hats, with giant ruffs around their necks. |
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This same minister endorses threats to partition Quebec and claims that Quebec has no right to decide its future, even through a democratic process recognized by all, except by him and his confederates. |
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He gazed owlishly down at his confederates and they gazed owlishly back at him. |
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They are but a host of confederates, and they will be put to flight. |
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That some 175,000 Confederates eventually surrendered suggests that fighting was a possibility, not a chimera. |
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With the losses sustained in the civil war, perhaps the Confederates decided to recommission some of their retired ships. |
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The Confederates launched a single counterattack aimed at retaking the sunken road, but failed to dislodge the Union. |
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For the next several weeks, the 82nd and the rest of the Army skirmished with the Confederates around Marietta and Kenesaw. |
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When the fighting died down, the Confederates hastily constructed breastworks to protect their gains. |
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As Confederates tried vainly to delay Union advances on Chancellorsville, General Jackson took a bullet in the arm. |
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Confederates of the researchers went to the pharmacies and made test purchases of non-prescription products without disclosing their identity. |
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To be sure, one can use official sources to identify uniformed Confederates who turned to bushwhacking after being caught behind enemy lines. |
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After Grant outflanked the Confederates and encircled Vicksburg, they stood him off for weeks. |
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The Russian envoy procured an analogous sum of 5000 chervonets from Augustus III for the Polish Confederates. |
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Among the sutlers ' stores captured by the Confederates at Manassas Junction on August 26-27, 1862, were quantities of canned oysters. |
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The Choctaw were surrounded by Confederates and held long-standing grievances against the United States. |
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He is, for example, an ardent apologist for Robert E. Lee, regarding him and other Confederates as American heroes. |
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Still, Confederates struck hard at McPherson's Federals in a fierce day-long battle. |
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For their part, the Confederates considered Lincoln's peace terms tantamount to unconditional surrender. |
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At the edge of the clearing some more Confederates were arriving, strengthening the Rebel ranks. |
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The Union army at Helena during the summer and fall of 1862 spent the majority of its energies fighting disease, not Confederates. |
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Despite heavy casualties, the Confederates kept their formation until they were intermingled with the northerners. |
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The next afternoon, hours after the Confederates had abandoned their campsite, McClellan's army marched through. |
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The American nation is the product of the Revolutionaries' success and the Confederates ' failure. |
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In this encounter, a Union garrison of about four thousand defeated four times as many attacking Confederates in a fierce morning contest. |
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Some 7,000 Confederates set sail for Brazil in the aftermath of the American Civil War, settling in a city called Americana. |
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The Confederates might have opted to purchase and import naval supplies such as machinery and iron plating before the war and its attendant blockade. |
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The Federals made contact with the Confederates at about 0615 hours. |
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Should we be surprised that Confederates were not so different? |
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Hardee's men collided with Federal skirmishers before daylight, and the Confederates soon struck three Union divisions without fieldworks under Brig. |
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Only after the Confederates surrendered Atlanta 150 years ago did Americans know that the Union would be preserved. |
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When Confederates surrendered, the same flag presided over the loyalty oaths that brought rebels back into a national community of the red, white, and blue. |
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The patriarch, Josiah, had fought with the 42nd Wisconsin Infantry, marching all the way to Kentucky to battle the Confederates. |
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It was originally used to refer to a Rapparee and later applied to Confederates or Cavaliers in arms. |
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The Confederates besieged Chattanooga during the Chattanooga Campaign in early fall 1863, but were driven off by Grant in November. |
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The Confederates, led by General James Longstreet, did attack General Burnside's Fort Sanders at Knoxville and lost. |
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George's evaded coastal blockades to provide supplies and munitions to the desperate Confederates. |
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Since the Emancipation Proclamation was based on the President's war powers, it only included territory held by Confederates at the time. |
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Ireland had known continuous war since the rebellion of 1641, with most of the island controlled by the Irish Confederates. |
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A 1645 picture map of the Siege of Duncannon shows Preston's Irish Confederates under a saltire. |
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These battles resulted in heavy losses on both sides, and forced Lee's Confederates to fall back repeatedly. |
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Based on the President's war powers, the Emancipation Proclamation applied to territory held by Confederates at the time. |
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Although Union forces gained control of Mississippi River tributaries, travel there was still subject to interdiction by the Confederates. |
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Confederates did not need to invade and hold enemy territory to win, but only needed to fight a defensive war to convince the North that the cost of winning was too high. |
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Increasingly threatened by the armies of the English Parliament after Charles I's arrest in 1648, the Confederates signed a treaty of alliance with the English Royalists. |
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