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Abridge |
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TO ABRIDGE, practice. To make shorter in words, so as to retain the sense or
substance. In law it signifies particularly the making of a declaration or
count shorter, by taking or severing away some of the substance from it.
Brook, tit. Abridgment; Com. Dig. Abridgment; 1 Vin. Ab. 109.
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? References in periodicals archive |
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As Kastan
demonstrates, the Acts and Monuments as it came to exist in the
"English imagination" is not one book; "rather, it is
several different books, each reflecting the particular interests of its
editors, redactors, abridgers, and publishers every bit as much as they
reflect Foxe's own concerns" (129). |
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