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Wardn. 1) a person (usually a minor) who has a guardian appointed by ...
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WardOld English weard "a guarding, protection; watchman, sentry, keeper," from Proto-Germanic *wardaz "guard" (source also of Old Saxon ward, Old Norse vörðr, Old High German wart), fr [..]
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WardOld English weardian "to keep guard, watch, protect, preserve," from Proto-Germanic *wardon "to guard" (source also of Old Saxon wardon, Old Norse varða "to guard," Old F [..]
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WardWarda prison ( Genesis 40:3 Genesis 40:4 ); a watch-station ( Isaiah 21:8 ); a guard ( Nehemiah 13:30 ).
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Wardneighborhood or political district in some large cities.
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WardA small sub-area of a local authority district.
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Ward1) A person (usually a minor) who has a guardian appointed by the court to care for and take responsibility for that person. Such a person is a "ward of the court" (if the custody is court-o [..]
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Warda person who is under the protection or in the custody of another guard: watch over or shield from danger or harm; protect; "guard my possessions while I'm away" [..]
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Warda large room in a hospital, where there are a number of beds for sick people
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Ward to guard.
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Warda prison (Gen. 40:3, 4); a watch-station (Isa. 21:8); a guard (Neh. 13:30).
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WardThe basic ecclesiastical unit of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Several wards form a stake.
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WardDistrito
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Ward A district used in a general law city. Similar to a single-member district, except that in Texas, most municipalities that have a ward system elect two council members from each ward.
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Ward1 : a division of a city for representative, electoral, or administrative purposes 2 a : a person who by reason of incapacity (as minority or incompetency) is under the control of a guardian b : a ...
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WardThe area around the outside of and adjacent to the inner curtain. (MEDIEV-L. Medieval Terms)
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WardCourtyard or bailey. (Gies, Joseph and Francis. Life in a Medieval Castle, 227)
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WardThe open area in the center of a castle. (MEDIEV-L. Medieval Terms)
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Warda section of a hospital or health facility where patients stay
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WardA ward is a person, usually a minor or incompetent, who has a guardian appointed by the court to care for and take responsibility for that person. A governmental agency may take temporary custody of a [..]
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WardShort form of Eduard.
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Ward(n) a person who is under the protection or in the custody of another(n) a district into which a city or town is divided for the purpose of administration and elections(n) block forming a division of [..]
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Wardpupillus pupilla
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WardA district under the charge of a warden. The word is applied to the subdivisions of Cumberland, Westmoreland, and Durham, which, being contiguous to Scotland, were placed under the charge of lord ward [..]
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Ward(See ARTEMUS WARD.)
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Ward(b. Hampstead, Dec. 2nd, 1837). “History of English Dramatic Literature to the Death of Queen Anne” (1875), “Chaucer” (1879); “Dickens” (1882), &a [..]
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Wardnée Mary Augusta Arnold (b. Hobart, Tasmania, 1851). “Milly and Olly” (1881); “Miss Bretherton” (1884), “Robert Elsmere” (1888); “David G [..]
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Ward“The Wish to Believe” (1884); “The Clothes of Religion” (1886); “W. G. Ward and the Oxford Movement” (1889); “W. G. Ward and the Catholic [..]
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Ward(b. 1812; d. 1882). “Ideal of a Christian Church” (1844); “Essays on the Philosophy of Theism” (1884), etc. Edited the Dublin Review. See Wilfrid Ward’s &a [..]
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Wardminor under the control of a guardian
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WardFrom an occupational surname for a watchman, derived from Old English weard "guard".
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WardBarbara Ward was born on 23 May 1914 and died in Sussex on 31 May 1981. After graduating from Somerville College, Oxford, she moved rapidly from teaching ...
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Ward"Ward" means a person within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court under ORS 419B.100 (Jurisdiction).
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Wardan administrative unit in London
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Wardn. 1) a person (usually a minor) who has a guardian appointed by the court to care for and take responsibility for that person. A governmental agency may take temporary custody of a minor for his/her [..]
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Wardn.(2) "custody," s.v. ward sb.\2 OED. KEY: ward@n2
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Wardn2 3 warde 3
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WardA person under the care of another. In this case, wards were often underage highborn hostages seized during battles by lords who sought to make their parents behave and put down their arms. Theon Greyjoy (Alfie Allen)—whose father, Lord Balon, launched the bloody Greyjoy Rebellion—is a ward at Winterfell, though he has been treated well by the Star [..]
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WardAn item that grants vision on the map.
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WardSmall sub-area of a local authority district.
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Ward(of castle) An area of land within a castle or a castle's jurisdiction. Sometimes the baileys
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WardA geographical area of a city defined for the purpose of Councillor representation. The interests of the property owners in these areas are represented on City Council by an elected councillor. X Y Year Built
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WardA neighbourhood which contains around 5,000 people.
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Warda person, usually a minor, placed under the care of a guardian.
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WardFrom an occupational surname for a watchman, derived from Old English weard "guard".
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WardShort form of Eduard.
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