What's the difference between freedman and freedmen?

Freedman


Definition:

  • (n.) A man who has been a slave, and has been set free.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Americans Stuart Freedman and Jon Clauser and French physicist Alain Aspect were the first to verify quantum entanglement experimentally.
  • (2) In view of the inability of copper-thionein to reconstitute Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase and of the detection of copper.GSH complexes in copper-over-loaded hepatoma cells (Freedman, J.H., Ciriolo, M.R., and Peisach, J.
  • (3) It could be a served bar situation, like a gelato bar, or a bulk option in the freezer where consumers can fill their own containers,” adds Freedman.
  • (4) Photograph: Carl Freedman It was just an idea we had at an Indian restaurant on Brick Lane, but we were excited about it right away.
  • (5) Despite the commercial and critical success of Hilary Mantel's novels last year, not a single "literary" title makes the top 20, with just Julia Donaldson's children's book The Gruffalo, Claire Freedman & Ben Cort's Aliens Love Underpants and the late Maeve Binchy's Minding Frankie flying the flag for the UK and Ireland's writers in the top 20.
  • (6) Under Dougie Freedman, who completes a year in charge on Monday, Forest have certainly become harder to beat and came into the match having conceded only once in their last five games; The fact that seven of their last 10 league matches had been drawn, however, was an indication they have been rather less effective going forward and their 4-1-4-1 formation did not help.
  • (7) A calamitous error by the Wanderers' goalkeeper Andy Lonergan gifted the Norwegian his second win as Cardiff manager, both in the competition he won twice with Manchester United, to deepen the depression enveloping Dougie Freedman's Championship team.
  • (8) Furthermore, mAb 104 binds to transfected COS cells (Freedman et al., 1989) expressing the B7 antigen.
  • (9) The characteristics demonstrate that sip1 and sip2 are similar to mutants previously reported by FREEDMAN and BRENNER(1972).
  • (10) This has happened three times what with Dougie [Freedman] leaving and then Ian [Holloway] and now Tony.
  • (11) Dr. Ana Cecilia Dinerstein, University of Bath Kate Driscoll Derickson, University of Glasgow Ivy Doherty, Leeds Metropolitan University Emma Dowling, Queen Mary University of London Fernando Durán-Palma, University of Westminster Dr Peter Dwyer, Ruskin College Oxford Nadine El-Enany, Brunel University Dr Vaughan Ellis, Edinburgh Napier University Alan Fair, Manchester Metropolitan University Aidan Farrow, Bristol University Ian Fitzgerald, University of Northumbria Suzy Fitzpatrick, Manchester Metropolitan University Professor Steve Fleetwood, University of the West of England Chris Forde, University of Leeds Dr Debbie Foster, Cardiff University Dr Carlos Frade, University of Salford Dr Des Freedman, Goldsmiths, University of London Dr Isabelle Fremeaux, Birkbeck College, University of London.
  • (12) "The strategy ... may have had partial success in getting some company directors to think about the possible reputational effects of their tax activities; in other cases, this strategy may be counter-productive because directors feel strongly that they should have the right to engage in legal activities that minimise tax," says Prof Judith Freedman.
  • (13) We knew we would have to ride our luck a bit,” Dougie Freedman, the Bolton manager, said.
  • (14) But if a strategy is the ability to respond to change within an evolving vision of achievable goals, in essence what Freedman concludes, then it can indeed mark the difference between life and death.
  • (15) He said: ‘You can’t do that,’” Freedman tells me.
  • (16) (4) Under the conditions used in these experiments, it reacts virtually exclusively with arginine moieties in protein (Freedman et al., '68; Takahashi, '68; Werber and Sokolovsky, '72).
  • (17) For a more extensive review of coronary artery spasm, I recommend the articles by Maseri and Chierchia (1982), Freedman et al (1982), Yasue et al (1983), and Chierchia (1982).
  • (18) Mr Justice Mitting, Othman's special advocate Angus McCollough, and his barristers Edward Fitzgerald and Danny Freedman, all played their part in a complex legal procedure in which the state's secret evidence can never be effectively challenged.
  • (19) Martin Freedman, director of economic strategy at the Association of Teachers and Lecturers, said teachers were now fitting in the equivalent of an extra full day a week by working during evenings and weekends.
  • (20) Freedman's formula predicts the highest power for the logrank test when the sample size ratio of the two groups equals the reciprocal of the hazard ratio.

Freedmen


Definition:

  • (pl. ) of Freedman

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Thirteen black patients with diagnoses of pseudotumor cerebri (benign intracranial hypertension) were treated in Howard University (Freedmen's Hospital) between 1962 and 1974.
  • (2) The group was spearheaded by Dr. Roland B. Scott and Dr. Angella Ferguson, both of whom were members of the Department of Pediatrics at Freedmen's Hospital (now Howard University Hospital).This group was perhaps the first of its kind, and adopted as its goals education and family support as well as fund-raising to aid in the support of research.
  • (3) In this perspective, the differences observed between the two Roman populations and between the sexes (in Isola Sacra) appear to result from different social habits: the middle class population of Portus habitually used thermal baths, whereas it is probable that thermae were seldom frequented (if at all) by the Lucus Feroniae population represented in the necropolis (mostly composed by slaves or freedmen farm laborers).
  • (4) A number of methadone-treated pregnant women deliver their infants at Freedmen's Hospital, affording the opportunity to observe neonates born to methadone-addicted mothers.
  • (5) Anthony was so upset with the idea of freedmen getting the vote before women that she frequently argued that educated white women would make better voters than ignorant black and immigrant men.
  • (6) A retrspective study was done and 61 cases of heroin-associated infective endocarditis were identified at Freedmen's Hospital and the District of Columbia General Hospital, Washington, DC between January 1969 and January 1973.
  • (7) From 1947 to 1984, 45 advanced ectopic pregnancies were delivered at Freedmen's Hospital and its successor, Howard University Hospital.
  • (8) She also wasn't above using racist fears to further her goals; after the 15th Amendment to the US constitution gave freedmen the right to vote, she argued that voting freedmen threatened the safety of white women (playing up fears of "racial contamination").

Words possibly related to "freedman"

Words possibly related to "freedmen"