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Kipling
[ kip-ling ]
noun
- (Joseph) Rud·yard [ruhd, -yerd], 1865–1936, English author: Nobel Prize 1907.
Kipling
/ ˈ°ìɪ±è±ôɪŋ /
noun
- Kipling(Joseph) Rudyard18651936MEnglishWRITING: poetWRITING: short-story writerWRITING: novelist ( Joseph ) Rudyard (ˈrʌdjəd). 1865–1936, English poet, short-story writer, and novelist, born in India. His works include Barrack-Room Ballads (1892), the two Jungle Books (1894, 1895), Stalky and Co (1899), Kim (1901), and the Just So Stories (1902): Nobel prize for literature 1907
Example Sentences
“It comes back to caveat emptor,†Kipling said.
Kipling, a retired Los Angeles Times editor and journalism professor, said he doesn’t believe there’s much they could have done had they been in California.
That first speech was scripted by Rudyard Kipling, who lay in state in the Fitzrovia Chapel before his funeral in Westminster Abbey.
The action soon kicks off with several flashes of fight scenes as an ominous, rhymic recording of Rudyard Kipling's war poem, Boots, is heard in the background.
He took on a series of jobs, making Mother's Pride bread and Kipling's Cakes near Southampton, and Bendick's Chocolate in Winchester, and said no-one ever queried his right to live or work in the UK.
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