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feaver

n. (obsolete spelling of fever English)

Wikipedia
Feaver

Feaver is a surname. It is an English surname of Norman French origin, and is an anglicisation of Lefebvre, meaning "smith". Notable people with the surname include:

  • Douglas Feaver (1914–97), Anglican bishop
  • John Feaver (born 1952), British tennis player
  • Peter Feaver, American professor of political science
  • Samuel Russell Feaver (1878–1946), New Zealand farmer, pharmacist, veterinary surgeon and photographer
  • Vicki Feaver (born 1943), English poet

Usage examples of "feaver".

Waging a running war against the medical establishment, Feaver, like many personal injury attorneys, had absorbed the lexicon of physicians.

She waited more than an hour before I got back, and when she came in, she told me a long, somewhat tawdry story about her relationship with a personal injury attorney named Robert Feaver.

He was a beefier version of Feaver, dark, elegantly dressed, with shining black hair moussed back into a bullet-shaped do.

But to start, the focus would be on the four judges currently sitting in Common Law Claims with whom Feaver was still doing business.

Dinnerstein and his partner, Robbie Feaver, had been paying off judges of the Common Law Claims Division for years.

The idea was that just as FBI agents had played Arab sheikhs in ABSCAM, they could act the part of the defense lawyers and parties in fictitious lawsuits Feaver would file.

I have rarely seen a judge who did not bear grudges-it is one of the perks of unquestioned power-and I knew the grudges formed against the person who represented Robbie Feaver would last.

Nevertheless, the note left her heart rattling around like a bell clapper as she rushed off to find Feaver.

Feaver chatted away for nearly twenty minutes about highlights of the basketball season in the Mid-Ten.

The predicate for the bug would be a conversation, much like the one in Peter Petros's case, in which Feaver told Wunsch that the outcome of the lawsuit would hinge on Malatesta's ruling.

Robbie generally reserved his lunchtimes for Mort, and every morning, after Feaver and Evon arrived, he and Mort spent a few minutes in what was called "the business meeting.

My friend David Cook had an illustrated book by William Feaver called Pitmen Painters, which he had once shown me.

Feaver brought to mind the brassy city types she began encountering in town as a child when two ski resorts cropped up like pimples on the clear face of adjacent mountains.

Yet they'd already lost Malatesta, and Feaver was done going to court on the contrived cases, since that wouldn't square with his pose with Dinnerstein.

But when he emerged, a relatively crisp image appeared, Feaver and Skolnick each slightly distorted by the wide-angle lens.