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Baruch

[ US /ˌbɑˈɹuk/ ]
NOUN
  1. economic advisor to United States Presidents (1870-1965)
  2. a disciple of and secretary for the prophet Jeremiah
  3. an Apocryphal book ascribed to Baruch

How To Use Baruch In A Sentence

  • Political circles in Berlin allege further that the connection of names like Frankfurter, Cohen and Baruch with the lease-lend bill demonstrated for whose interest the United States was embarking upon this lethal step. Human Smoke
  • Yehuda Baruch, a professor of management at the University of East Anglia, and graduate Stuart Jenkins studied the use of profanity in the workplace and assessed its implications for managers.
  • Hiccup's less-than-macho nature and scrawny physique is not unlike Wart, the hero of Baruchel's childhood favorite, The Sword in the Stone. First look: DreamWorks' 3-D 'How to Train Your Dragon'
  • The effort would be overseen by a powerful crisis manager modeled on Bernard Baruch, Woodrow Wilson's domestic war czar.
  • The researcher who discovered this vaccine -- and hepatitis B itself -- was an American named Baruch Blumberg.
  • Baruchel's one of those yet to break out -- he calls himself a perpetual "cusper," since promises of a breakthrough (most recently in fellow Apatow alum Ben Stiller's "Tropical Thunder") never actually happened, which doesn't bother him. IFC.com - Indie Eye
  • Having been barred from entrance into the temple precincts, the prophet dictates his message to Baruch.
  • Yehuda Baruch, a professor of management at the University of East Anglia, and graduate student Stuart Jenkins studied profanity in the workplace and assessed its implications for managers.
  • He has influenced Israel for the better more than any other American Jew -- and I say this with some sadness, as, along with Meir Kahane and Baruch Goldstein, the designation includes Golda Meir, who, in retrospect, blazed Israel's current trail of refusal to read signs of peace and refusal to respond appropriately to signs of danger. Bradley Burston: Bob Dylan, It Turns Out, Lives in Israel
  • Their imitation of Philo's allegorism serves to mark the important place that he occupied in the learned world during the seventeenth century; and supports, however slightly, the suggestion that he influenced, directly or indirectly, the supreme Jewish philosopher of the age, Baruch de Spinoza. Philo-Judaeus of Alexandria
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