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Seventy-nine   /sˈɛvənti-naɪn/   Listen
Seventy-nine

adjective
1.
Being nine more than seventy.  Synonyms: 79, ilxxx.






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"Seventy-nine" Quotes from Famous Books



... season waned the vessels, which linked them to the world they had left, unfurled their sails and set out for France. Seventy-nine men remained at St Croix, among them De Monts and Champlain. In the vast solitude of forest they settled down for the winter, which was destined to be full of horrors. By spring thirty-five of the company had died of scurvy and twenty more were at the point of ...
— The Acadian Exiles - A Chronicle of the Land of Evangeline • Arthur G. Doughty

... million seven hundred and eighty nine thousand nine hundred and seventy-nine bicycles that have not flown three ...
— Crowds - A Moving-Picture of Democracy • Gerald Stanley Lee

... I were asked to tell what I think of the individuals inhabiting the United States, I should have to give it up. Assuming a round eighty million persons, all of whom it would be a pleasure to meet, there must be, at the lowest computation, seventy-nine million, nine hundred and ninety-nine thousand, three hundred and seventy-five people of whose characters I do not know enough to make my opinion of any value. Of the remaining fragment of the population, ...
— By the Christmas Fire • Samuel McChord Crothers

... set sail for France, proposing to return and take possession of his domain of Port Royal. Seventy-nine men remained at St. Croix. Here was De Monts, feudal lord of half a continent in virtue of two potent syllables, "Henri," scrawled on parchment by the rugged hand of the Bearnais. Here were gentlemen of birth and breeding, Champlain, D'Orville, Beaumont, Sourin, ...
— Pioneers Of France In The New World • Francis Parkman, Jr.

... climates and seasons, can only be attributed to God's special guidance and care. In Melbourne, influenza raged in the home where he was billetted, and seized upon one of the Officers travelling with him. And yet he escaped, and could resume his journey undelayed. In South Africa, when he was seventy-nine, another of his companions in travel was separated from him for days by severe illness; but The General, in spite of a milder attack of the same sort, was able to fulfil every appointment made ...
— The Authoritative Life of General William Booth • George Scott Railton


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