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Dever

Dever may refer to:

  • Barbara Dever (born 1951), opera singer, appeared with Luciano Pavarotti, Plácido Domingo, Zubin Mehta
  • Belinda Dever (born 1977), Australian retired netball player
  • Dever Orgill (born 1990), Jamaican footballer
  • James C. Dever III (born 1962), United States federal judge
  • James Dever (1825–1904), Irish-born merchant and political figure in New Brunswick, Canada
  • Joe Dever (born 1956), award-winning British fantasy author and game designer
  • Kaitlyn Dever (born 1996), American actress
  • Mark Dever (born 1960), senior pastor of the Capitol Hill Baptist Church in Washington, D.C.
  • Paul A. Dever (1903–1958), Democratic politician from Boston, Massachusetts
  • Seamus Dever (born 1976), American actor
  • William Emmett Dever (1862–1929), the Democratic mayor of Chicago, Illinois, U.S. from 1923 to 1927
  • William G. Dever (born 1933), American archaeologist, specialising in the history of Israel and the Near East in Biblical times

Usage examples of "dever".

She allowed Dever to murmur his incomprehensible nonsense into her delicate ear, and then she faced the rest of us.

And that rum fellow Dever came out with apocalyptic warnings of the consequences were the stopcock closed.

He had a reputation for being temperamental in the OR, but I had Dever seen him act that way on the floor.

The fact that Lieutenant Davies, finding Moore and Rupp actually so weak from lack of food that they could hardly drag one leg after another, had been sharing with them his own slender store of provision was not the first thing the men had noted in his favor, but that was no reason, thought Devers, why they should raise their voices and glance covertly in his direction when referring to it.

Captain Devers was one of those officers who seemed never to grasp an order at first hand.

Captain Devers, as senior officer, left in command with the troops that remained clustered about the still warm and bleeding bodies of their murdered comrades, and his first order was characteristic.

Davies neared them, riding diagonally towards the troop from the low divide to the east, Devers did not change the direction of his little column so as to meet him half-way, but held on sullenly southward.

The more he followed the right bank the farther west of south it bore him, and Devers hid his compass with his conscience in the breast of his hunting-shirt, and found relief in renewed expletives.

Major Warren assumed two things: first, that Devers had carried out his orders, crossed the long spur that jutted down almost to the stream at its deep concave bend, and then, moving south, had kept Davies in sight, if not actually in touch.

For, reasoned the major, had Davies been attacked, Devers would have known it, supported him at once, and sent word to us.

Men instructed to watch for signals from the ridge had reported that nothing had been seen, which surely would not have been the case had Devers desired to communicate.

The major stood by the camp-fire, his hands clasped behind his back, looking full in the face of the troop commander, all the old sayings that he had ever heard with regard to Devers crowding upon him now.

But even Devers got to sleep at last, and when he woke it was with a sudden start, with broad daylight streaming in his eyes, and stir and bustle and low-toned orders and rapid movement among the men, and Hastings was stirring him up with insubordinate boot and speaking in tones suggestive of neither respect nor esteem.

Less than an hour, Devers thought, elapsed before he could again have come within sight of the spot where he left his little command.

There was no end of speculation and chaff around the camp-fires, therefore, early in the summer, when Devers, most unwillingly, it was said, was hauled in from some outlying post where he had nothing to do but hunt, eat, and sleep, and reported for duty on what turned out to be the toughest of Indian campaigns.