father
The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
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2006
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© The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable 2006, originally published by Oxford University Press 2006. (Hide copyright information)
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father Father Christmas an imaginary figure said to bring presents for children on the night before Christmas Day. He is conventionally pictured as a jolly old man from the far north, with a long white beard and red garments trimmed with white fur, an image which is comparatively recent. In late medieval Europe he became identified with St Nicholas (Santa Claus); in England Father Christmas was a personification of Christmas in many 16th-century masques and in mummers' plays. There was a great revival of the celebration of Christmas in the 19th century and Father Christmas acquired (from St Nicholas) the association of present-bringing.
Father of English Poetry a name for Geoffrey
Chaucer, given him by John Dryden.
Father of History a name for
Herodotus.
Father of Lies a name for the Devil; originally with biblical allusion to John 8:44.
father of the chapel in the UK, the shop steward of a printers' trade union; a
chapel in this sense was originally a printers' workshop or printing office, and then a meeting or association of the journeymen in a printing office for arranging affairs and settling disagreements among themselves.
Father of the Faithful a name for the patriarch Abraham, after Romans 4:11. In Muslim usage, it is a title for the Caliph.
Father of the House of Commons the member with the longest continuous service.
Father of Waters an informal name for the Mississippi.
Father's Day is a day of the year on which fathers are particularly honoured by their children, especially with gifts and greetings cards. It was first observed in the state of Washington in 1910; in the US and Britain, it is usually the third Sunday in June, in Australia, the first Sunday in September.
the Fathers of the Church early Christian theologians (in particular of the first five centuries) whose writings are regarded as especially authoritative.
like father, like son often used to call attention to similarities in behaviour which are supposedly inherited. The saying is recorded from the mid 14th century.
Like father, like daughter is a variant of this (the proverb
like mother, like daughter evolved separately). A related saying in Latin is, ‘
qualis pater talis filius [as is the father, so is the son].’
see also
the child is father of the man,
experience is the father of wisdom,
success has many fathers,
Father Time at time,
it is a wise child that knows its own father,
the wish is father to the thought.
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YALE: Espionage conference at Yale.
M2 Presswire; 2/26/1999; 700+ words
; ...PRESSWIRE-26 February 1999-YALE: Espionage conference at Yale (C)1994-99 M2...are welcome to attend "The Matter of Espionage" conference, which was organized by...who wrote the book "Reflections on Espionage." Conference speakers will explore...
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Cyber espionage seen as growing threat to business, government; SANS Institute ranks it No. 3 on cyber menace list.
Magazine article from: Network World; 1/17/2008; ; 700+ words
; Byline: Ellen Messmer Cyber espionage is getting renewed attention as...SANS Institute has ranked cyber espionage No. 3 on its "Top Ten Cyber Menaces...the infamous Storm. "Economic espionage will be increasingly common as nation...
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State-sponsored crime: the futility of the Economic Espionage Act.
Magazine article from: Houston Journal of International Law; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; I. INTRODUCTION II. THE PROBLEM A. State-Sponsored Economic Espionage B. Economic Espionage and the Internet C. Economic Espionage: The Usual Suspects? 1. France 2. Russia 3. Japan 4. China 5. Germany 6. Israel...
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Who will spy? (the five conditions that must be met before an employee commits espionage)
Magazine article from: Security Management; 7/1/1991; ; 700+ words
; ESPIONAGE is a major problem for both industry...more than 60 Americans who committed espionage against the United States since 1981...presumably much larger number of industrial espionage cases that also occurred during that...
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None dare call it treason: the constitutionality of the death penalty for peacetime espionage.
Magazine article from: Cornell Law Review; 3/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...Hanssen pleaded guilty to fifteen counts of espionage, and will serve the remainder of his...invocation of capital punishment for an espionage offense. Less than two years earlier...the [f]ederal [g]overnment in an espionage case. You know what happened to them...
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More evidence that Clinton lied about espionage
Magazine article from: Human Events; 6/4/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...has reported to me that they suspect" espionage had occurred at America's national...select committee that investigated the espionage, Russert walked step by step through...received details of evidence of Chinese espionage at the labs. But Lockhart himself...
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A Revised Computer Espionage Law?; Change Would Allow Prosecution of Whistle-Blowers and Journalists
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 7/5/1990; ; 700+ words
; ...seeking a change in the federal computer espionage law that would open the door to prosecution...Department said the proposal would make the espionage law "more useful." It would eliminate...provision in current law requiring proof of espionage and make it a crime simply to use-or...
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War By Other Means: Economic Espionage in America.
Magazine article from: Issues in Science and Technology; 12/22/1996; ; 700+ words
; The Cold War may be over, but espionage apparently is still thriving. Now, however, it's economic espionage. Former FBI and CIA officials have...baseline of information about economic espionage against the United States. The book...
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Clinton's claims on Chinese espionage refuted by report in New York Times
Magazine article from: Human Events; 4/16/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...that he was unaware that any Chinese espionage against the United States had taken place...aggressively by reporters probing the Chinese espionage story. His answers appeared as evasive...Lewinsky scandal. The first exchange on espionage went as follows: Mr. President. how...
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Causes of action for foreign victims of economic espionage abroad by U.S. intelligence.
Magazine article from: Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law; 3/22/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...THE PROBLEM The FBI defines economic espionage as "foreign power-coordinated intelligence...there were approximately 800 economic espionage matters under investigation by the FBI...backlash.(7) The effects of economic espionage are also less tangible in that they can...
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Espionage and Intelligence, Early Historical Foundations
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
Espionage and Intelligence, Early Historical Foundations █ ADRIENNE WILMOTH LERNER Espionage is one of the oldest, and most well...the most intrigue, but the history of espionage is better described in terms of the evolution...
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Espionage
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
Espionage Espionage is the use of spies, or the practice of spying, for the purpose of...virtue of the clandestine, aggressive, and dangerous nature of the espionage trade. The term espionage comes from a French word meaning to spy...
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espionage
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
espionage , the act of obtaining information clandestinely...for the benefit of another. Industrial espionage—the theft of patents and processes...business firms—is not properly espionage at all. Modern Espionage Espionage is...
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Movies, Espionage and Intelligence Portrayals
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
Movies, Espionage and Intelligence Portrayals █ JUDSON KNIGHT Although depictions of espionage, intelligence, and related activities...1950s, Hollywood had entered the Cold War espionage genre. Later decades have seen portrayals...
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Economic Espionage
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
Economic Espionage █ JUDSON KNIGHT Economic espionage, sometimes known as industrial espionage, is spying conducted for the benefit of a commercial or industrial enterprise, typically to gain information not available through open channels...
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