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Updated: June 12, 2025


The proprietor of this bifurcated establishment, a man with red hair, a low forehead, a broad chin, and brawny shoulders, a long lip and long arms, rejoiced in the name of Nicholas Crimins, though by most of his customers he was irreverently called by a diminutive of that name.

To descend was, in fact, possible safety. He left on his right the two narrow passages which branch out in the form of a claw under the Rue Laffitte and the Rue Saint-Georges and the long, bifurcated corridor of the Chaussee d'Antin. A little beyond an affluent, which was, probably, the Madeleine branch, he halted. He was extremely weary.

Eastham's house," he said, checking the horse's pace as they approached a roomy, comfortable-looking mansion, occupying an angle where the village street sharply bifurcated. "And there is Beechcroft!" The lodge faced the road along which they were advancing.

Some soldiers in the darkness, watching the string of lanterns, gave a half-ironical 'Hurrah. One by one, as the tracks bifurcated, George dispatched his men, with renewed insistent advice, and at last he and his horse were alone on the Downs. His clothes were exceedingly heavy with all the moisture they had imbibed.

Beneath, those corridors, so narrow that two persons could not walk along them abreast, descended at a gentle slope, and bifurcated so that there was a labyrinth of lanes, leading to veritable cells, on the walls of which the nitre scintillated in the light of the lantern like steel mica or twinkling grains of sugar.

Our author's volume, we are happy to say, is not thus bifurcated. His law is in his text, and his sources are in his notes. There is another feature which we dare not overlook, and that is, the hearty conscientiousness with which the writer does his work. He takes nothing at secondhand, but goes straightway to the authorities.

And so he saw himself faced by the close of his evening a thing uniform, and yet bifurcated by the intervening accident which would either put an end to his agony by discovering Odette, or would oblige him to abandon any hope of finding her that night, to accept the necessity of returning home without having seen her.

A spokesman for the lodgers found his voice. "Well, we ain't a-goin' to stay in no doggone house with a chink shoved in fer a cook." Van nodded: "Have you ever tried Algy's cooking?" "No, we ain't! And we ain't a-goin' to, neither!" The others murmured their assent. "You're a fine discriminating cluster of bifurcated, viviparous idiots," said Van in visibly disturbing scorn.

Lindsay was an hour later than usual, but Mysie was quite unaware of that: she had been absorbed in her book, too much absorbed even to ring for better light than the fire afforded. When her father went to put off his long, bifurcated greatcoat, she returned to her seat by the fire, and forgot to make the tea.

Manifold speaks of a case of bifurcated epiglottis. Debloisi records an instance of congenital web of the vocal bands. Mackenzie removed a congenital papillomatous web which had united the vocal cords until the age of twenty-three, thus establishing the voice. Poore also recorded a case of congenital web in the larynx. Elsberg and Scheff mention occlusion of the rima glottidis by a membrane.

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