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Definition of Didion
1. Noun. United States writer (born in 1934).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Didion
Literary usage of Didion
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Resistance of Air by Richard De Villamil (1917)
"CHAPTER XIV " BALLISTICS " CONTINUED—ZAHM, HOBERT, didion, HELIE, MORIN, PERRY
LET us now return to the resistance of shot. I attach the greatest importance ..."
2. A Practical Treatise on Bridge-construction: Being a Text-book on the Design by Thomas Claxton Fidler (1887)
"... that the actual coefficient for the sphere is 041, and for the cylinder 0'57.
According to didion, the coefficient for a parachute, whose depth is ..."
3. The Western Law Times of Canada by Archer Evans Stringer Martin, John Thompson Huggard (1895)
"didion. OCTOBER 18, 1894.] [TAYLOR, CJ Practice—Costs—Set off not allowed where
the parties arc different or where the judgment is recovered in different ..."
4. The Canadian Law Times by Judicial Committee, Great Britain, Privy Council (1894)
"The plaintiffs, judgment creditors of E. didion, filed their bill to have a
judgment recovered against him by CB didion ..."