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Own   /oʊn/   Listen
Own

adjective
1.
Belonging to or on behalf of a specified person (especially yourself); preceded by a possessive.  Synonym: ain.  "Do your own thing" , "She makes her own clothes" , "'ain' is Scottish"
verb
(past & past part. owned; pres. part. owning)
1.
Have ownership or possession of.  Synonyms: have, possess.  "How many cars does she have?"



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"Own" Quotes from Famous Books



... Aske committed his fatal but noble error. Had he struck then, he could in all probability have marched triumphantly to London and have dictated his own terms. But he did not wish to strike. He sought a conference, and laid his proposals before Norfolk. Norfolk temporised, and referred the proposals to London. The insurgents were allowed to believe that ...
— England Under the Tudors • Arthur D. Innes

... foreign country. MacRae could afford to smile. Over in Bellingham there were salmon packers who, like Folly Bay, were hungry for fish to feed their great machines. But—unlike Folly Bay—they were willing to pay the price, any price in reason, for a supply of salmon. Their own carriers later in the season would invade Canadian waters, so many thorns in the ample sides of the British Columbia packers. "The damned Americans!" they sometimes growled, and talked about legislation ...
— Poor Man's Rock • Bertrand W. Sinclair

... managed its own affairs, untroubled by squire or priest, very little troubled by the state. That within their little means they did it well, no one can doubt. They taxed themselves without friction, they built their own monastery schools ...
— The Soul of a People • H. Fielding

... not improbable that when a young man was chosen crown prince he had an establishment of his own assigned to him, and this became his palace which he occupied when he became emperor. When a man died, and especially when an emperor died, it was an ancient custom to abandon his abode. It became unclean by the presence ...
— Japan • David Murray

... wave. Happiness lay beside him steering the boat, a seraph worked the oars, the land ahead must be paradise. His was a lover's story, clear, yet broken with phrases of love; for was he not speaking to the heart, half his own, that beat with his in unison? The tears flowed down the deacon's cheek, tears of dread and of sympathy. What if Honora refused this gift laid so reverently at her feet? He ...
— The Art of Disappearing • John Talbot Smith


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