(n.) A familiar appellation of civility, equivalent to "My friend", "Good sir", "Mister;" -- sometimes used ironically.
(n.) A husband; the master of a house or family; -- often used in speaking familiarly.
Example Sentences:
(1) James Goodman, chairman of the Wyre Forest GPs' Association, said: "We didn't necessarily fully support the changes at the start of the process.
(2) Maberley told him there were 6,000 instances of phone hacking, although only one case had been prosecuted, involving the royal reporter Clive Goodman, who subsequently went to jail.
(3) He said ANC lawyers would go to court to force the Goodman gallery in Johannesburg to remove a painting of the president, Jacob Zuma, from the exhibition and from its website .
(4) The culture, media and sport select committee was also damning of the police, saying Scotland Yard should have broadened its original investigation in 2006, and not just focused on Clive Goodman, the NoW's royal reporter.
(5) Since then, a string of allegations have surfaced that have cast doubt on the notion that phone tapping at the paper was down to one rogue reporter, Clive Goodman, acting alone.
(6) Scotland Yard and the Press Complaints Commission also found no evidence of the involvement in hacking of anybody at the paper other than Goodman.
(7) Goodman deceived us all, the witnesses sorrowfully admitted.
(8) He suggested that this undermined the News of the World's claim that Goodman, the paper's former royal reporter who was jailed for phone hacking in January 2007, was a "rogue reporter".
(9) Cameron offered him the job after the local elections in May 2007 and asked him about the court case which had led to Goodman and Mulcaire's convictions.
(10) At the time, News International said it knew of no other journalist who was involved in hacking phones and that Goodman had acted without their knowledge.
(11) The suppressed legal cases are linked to the jailing in January 2007 of a News of the World reporter, Clive Goodman, for hacking into the mobile phones of three royal staff, an offence under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act.
(12) The News of the World has always maintained that Goodman and Mulcaire were acting alone without the knowledge of senior journalists.
(13) But Goodman added: "The line between advice on policy (which Crosby doesn't give) and advice on strategy (which he certainly does) isn't the iron wall that Downing Street and CCHQ would like to assert: the one tends to meld into the other.
(14) The report of the inquiry, which helped bring down the Irish government of the day, found fraud and serious illegality in Goodman's companies in the 1980s that had involved not just the faking of documents, but also the commissioning of bogus official stamps, including those of other countries, to misclassify carcasses; passing off of inferior beef trimmings as higher-grade meat; cheating of customs officers; and institutionalised tax evasion.
(15) He certainly never expected anything like it back in 2007, when his committee was assured by Hinton and others that the News of the World's royal correspondent , Clive Goodman, was the only reporter to have engaged in phone hacking.
(16) Claim number three: a single rogue reporter [Clive Goodman] was responsible.
(17) Sentencing Mulcaire, the judge said: "As to counts 16 to 20, you had not dealt with Goodman but with others at News International.
(18) In the case of Edmondson's ex-colleague Clive Goodman, the paper's former royal editor, some of those scoops involved paying the private detective Glenn Mulcaire to hack into phone messages left on mobile phones belonging to public figures.
(19) After MP Helen Goodman wrote in the Huffington Post that she was backing Yvette Cooper for leadership because Cooper was a fellow parent , there was even more debate about whether or not a prospective leader needs to be a mother .
(20) When Cyt a is ferrous, Cyt a3(3+)-azide has g = 2.88, 2.19 and 1.64; upon oxidation of Cyt a, the a3(3+)-azide g-values become g = 2.77, 2.18, and 1.74 (Goodman, G. (1984) J Biol.
Woodman
Definition:
(n.) A forest officer appointed to take care of the king's woods; a forester.
(n.) A sportsman; a hunter.
(n.) One who cuts down trees; a woodcutter.
(n.) One who dwells in the woods or forest; a bushman.
Example Sentences:
(1) New Channel 4 series Around the World in 80 Trades, in which economist Conor Woodman tries to trade his way around the world, beginning with the proceeds from the sale of his flat, began with 900,000 viewers, a 5% share, between 9pm and 10pm.
(2) Woodman's external laterofixation was performed in 31 patients, 1 had laterofixation by laryngofissure and 2 had endoscopic arytenoidectomy.
(3) Owner Steve Woodman, grandson of Chubby, took me down the river on his boat to see where they come from.
(4) The landlady of the local Woodman pub, Kath Dewhurst, recalled the multimillionaire dropping in to do the quiz with his wife, Julie.
(5) Pardew, his assistant John Carver, the coach Steve Stone and the goalkeeping coach Andy Woodman have been awarded identical deals in keeping with the eight-year contract that the influential chief scout Graham Carr signed in June.
(6) The manager’s only other option is the 17-year-old Freddie Woodman, with the situation complicated by the club’s decision to loan Karl Darlow back to Nottingham Forest for the season with no recall clause.
(7) In this part of the world, clams are as important as lobsters, and back at Woodman's a queue was forming at the self-service counter at 11.30am.
(8) During the period 1962 through 1974, 23 patients with complete bilateral paralysis of the larynx have been treated by the posterior extralaryngeal approach originally described by Woodman.
(9) It also suggests that the 1928-set film will "handily corner the upscale adult demo for the remainder of summer, continuing the Woodman’s late-career hot streak".
(10) Woodman’s school, rated outstanding, is £100,000 in the red for next year.
(11) It’s not a place we really want to go,” said Peter Woodman, headteacher of the Weald school in Billingshurst.
(12) Last year Woodman published an interesting carbocyanine dye binding method for determination of serum carbohydrate polyanions in sera of normal, traumatized, and tumor-bearing mice.
(13) England held their nerve throughout the penalty kicks, the captain Ryan Ledson leading the way with the first, Taylor Moore and Callum Cooke following suit while the goalkeeper Freddie Woodman saved from Dani van der Moot while Calvin Verdonk fired wide with Holland’s third attempt.
(14) But me, Andy Woodman [Newcastle’s goalkeeping coach] and Steve Stone [the club’s first team coach] would have a laugh and a joke about it.
(15) The administration of multiple doses of cocaine on a single day during late gestation is teratogenic in rats in which hind limb ectrodactyly is a major finding (Webster and Brown-Woodman, '90).
(16) In between “jobs” he is the landlord of the Woodman Inn, a pub in Manchester.
(17) It is argued that while infra-red recording techniques may be optimal for recording LEMs to verbal questions, the above results question the generalizability of strong LEM-spatial relationships obtained for a single blind subject by GRIFFITHS and WOODMAN [Neuropsychologia 23, 257-262, 1985].
(18) A 1% teacher pay rise, an increase in employer-paid pension contributions and higher national insurance rates for employers – all unfunded – means, says Peter Woodman, chair of the West Sussex Secondary Headteachers Association, that from 2016-17, every teaching post will cost him an additional 5% a year.
(19) Using an approach similar to the Woodman arytenoidectomy, the posterior cricoarytenoid muscle is exposed, and its fibers are partially incised.
(20) Woodman's restaurant is the spiritual home of the clam – Chubby Woodman claimed to have invented the fried clam in 1916.