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He was later commissioned as a sub-lieutenant, but retained his new unhyphenated surname.
In Canada the title "Governor General" is always used unhyphenated.
His most noble political motive had always been the propagation of "unhyphenated Canadian- ism."
Certainly, for the mostly unhyphenated conservatives who make up the large Reagan wing of the party, the slogan has a vaguely negative connotation.
They figure Victoria's got one of those unhyphenated double last names- Like Conan Doyle.
Today's frog march (as a noun, two unhyphenated words) implies incarceration after the spread-eagled carriage or its modern grabbing of the arms.
Authorities on Alkan seem to use both hyphenated and unhyphenated forms indiscriminately - sometimes changing their opinion between books.
The surname Vaughan Williams is an unhyphenated double-barrelled name of Welsh origin.
Reflecting its prestige, the name Abel Smith has also metamorphosed into an unhyphenated double barrelled surname.
It is said that most people who have emigrated to the U.S. over the years have arrived expecting to become unhyphenated Americans.
Of note, Carrington used the unhyphenated title in his introduction even though the title page of the volume was hyphenated.
Ms. Mouro dismisses the analogy as "presumptuous," but not those who watched her when she was the only "unhyphenated American" remaining on the university campus.
The term bed bug may also be spelled bedbug or bed-bug, though published sources consistently use the unhyphenated two-word name bed bug.
Some scholars favor the unhyphenated form antisemitism to avoid possible confusion involving whether the term refers specifically to Jews, or to Semitic-language speakers as a whole.
This term refers to the unhyphenated English word "cooperation" often being changed to "Cupertino" by older spellcheckers with dictionaries containing only the hyphenated variant, "co-operation".
Buccleuch then added the surname to his own, forming the unhyphenated surname Montagu Douglas Scott which the family bears to this day.
Kleinfeltersville is one of the longest one-word, unhyphenated place names in the United States recognized by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names.
Like his father-in-law, Buccleuch wished to perpetuate the Montagu name, and adopted the unhyphenated surname Montagu Scott.
But while unhyphenated baseball did not dislodge cricket, which seems to face a more serious colonial threat from American football, there is new evidence that hope springs eternal for America's pastime in England.
He integrated the surnames "Montagu" and "Douglas" with the Scott family name to form the unhyphenated compound surname "Montagu Douglas Scott".
For example, Emil Fackenheim supported the unhyphenated spelling, in order to "[dispel] the notion that there is an entity 'Semitism' which 'anti-Semitism' opposes."
When used unhyphenated, in conjunction with no other indicator of rank, the term refers to the rank just senior to that of an army captain and just below the rank of lieutenant colonel.
The Crozes vineyards swarm around the base of the hill of Hermitage, the source of the unhyphenated Hermitage, one of the great wines of France or any other country.
In unhyphenated English, that means scrapping the old idea of readiness to fight two conventional wars simultaneously, and substituting a new ability quickly to project a force powerful enough to win a conflict anywhere in the world. "
William Ozmun Wyckoff, president of the New York State Shorthand Reporters' Association in 1886, and founder of the Remington Typewriter Company, publicized the unhyphenated name "typewriter".