bannet

bannet

(ˈbænɪt)
n
Scot a bonnet
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Bannet Ndyanabangi says the donation is meant to strengthen the long existing partnership with LISGIS and enhance its work as the Institute prepares for national demographic and health survey across the country.
Helena who disinterred the body of a buried comrade and set out to sea in the coffin." As these desperate figures were "harassed by fear and dogged by ecological degradation, they sank more and more to the level of animals, lost the use of speech, went mad, or died of inaction." (47) Eve Tavor Bannet explains that this "other Robinson Crusoe" was "Less what Joyce called 'the symbol of British conquests' and the 'true prototype of the British colonist' than a representative of the often victimized British common man...
early national discourses (Bannet and Manning 1-2).
From Gershwin's 'Three Preludes' arranged by Jay Gach to the Frank Bannet arrangement of 'Fascinatin' Rhythm,' 'Embraceable You' and 'I Got Rhythm,' Constantino, accompanied by pianist Paguirigan, gave us a worthy showcase of the clarinet as a formidable instrument.
(35.) Representative discussions are found in EVE TAYLOR BANNET, STRUCTURALISM AND THE LOGIC OF DISSENT (1989) and MARK POSTER, CRITICAL THEORY AND POSTSTRUCTURALISM (1989).
Elizabeth Bannet, Sherlock Holmes, Peter Pan, Bertie Wooster, Hercule Poirot, James Bond and Asterix the Gaul: All have had a fictional afterlife unimagined by their creators.
Eve Bannet and Yael Shapira both explore from innovative transatlantic perspectives the under-examined role of the Jew in early American drama.