|
Definition of I. f. stone
1. Noun. United States journalist who advocated liberal causes (1907-1989).
Lexicographical Neighbors of I. F. Stone
I-HAWK I-TEVII endonuclease I-TEVI endonuclease I-beam I-beams I-cell I-cell disease I-frame I-frames I-spin | I-spy I.D. I.Q. I.W.W. I. A. Richards I. F. Stone I. M. Pei I/O I/O bound I2 | I3 IA IAA IAAF IAB IABP IAD IADS IAEA IALA |
Literary usage of I. f. stone
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Hints to Young Architects: Calculated to Facilitate Their Practical Operations by George Wightwick, Andrew Jackson Downing (1847)
"... (If stone piers: state whether wholly of wrought stone!—in one ? or how many
stones ? or whether hinge stones only are required; to be built into ..."
2. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1912)
"If Stone was the true owner of the cotton, and made a cash sale of it to Gid-
dens, or his brother, and the cash was not paid him, no title passed out of ..."
3. Massachusetts Reports: Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Judicial by Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (1919)
"If stone could not be crushed at the location furnished by the defendant because
crushing stone there was a violation of the rights of those living in the ..."
4. Concrete Costs: Tables and Recommendations for Estimating the Time and Cost by Frederick Winslow Taylor, Sanford Eleazer Thompson (1912)
"If stone has 40% voids, multiply the costs in the tables by 0.95. If stone has
30% voids, multiply the costs in the tables by 0.87. ..."
5. Reports of Cases in Law and Equity in the Supreme Court of the State of New York by Oliver Lorenzo Barbour, New York (State). Supreme Court (1866)
"The judge charged that if Stone bought in his own name, without disclosing the
defendant as his principal, and the defendant without notice of the purchase ..."
6. An Index of Surgery: Being a Concise Classification of the Main Facts and by Charles Robert Bell Keetley (1885)
"Sometimes stone can be more easily extracted between forefinger and scoop than
by forceps or by finger alone. If stone breaks up, use of scoop and of ..."