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Bridie
[ brahy-dee ]
bridie
1/ ˈbrəɪdɪ; ˈɪɪ /
noun
- a semicircular pie containing meat and onions
Bridie
2/ ˈɪɪ /
noun
- BridieJames18881951MScottishMEDICINE: physicianTHEATRE: dramatist James , real name Osborne Henry Mavor . 1888–1951, Scottish physician and dramatist, who founded the Glasgow Citizens' Theatre. His plays include The Anatomist (1930)
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of Bridie1
Example Sentences
"Jolene's future was so bright, with a desire to become a sports physiotherapist," her mother Bridie recalled.
Her mother, Bridie Marlow, said she had always "secretly dreaded" her Jolene leaving home to study in Belfast in case the Troubles flared up again.
Bridie Marlow's statement, read on her behalf to the inquiry, said her daughter was denied the chance to accomplish her life's full potential.
"Little did we know then that our home town of Omagh where Jolene had attended school, had a part-time job, was learning to drive, socialised and shopped, would be the actual place where she would be denied all of her hopes and her dreams of her bright future," Bridie's statement said.
Granting a judicial review challenge by the victim's 87-year-old widow Bridie Brown, he held there is a "clear and unambiguous obligation" to establish a statutory probe.
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