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The surrendered
verb
To give up into the power, control, or possession of another; specifically to yield (a town, a fortification, etc.) to an enemy.
Exact(59)
The Surrendered, the recipient of enthusiastic reviews in the United States, intermittently offers itself as a modern variation of The Iliad.
The surrendered wife provides sex on demand (a rather innocuous edict compared with a zestier suggestion in Marabel Morgan's 1973 work, "The Total Woman," which urged wives to greet their husbands naked and wrapped in cellophane).
The surrendered land will become a wetland habitat for many species.
The surrendered soldiers, some 40 individuals from each place, were impaled.
The surrendered students are facing misdemeanor charges, and the scandal has prompted a review by a New York Senate subcommittee on higher education.
That was believed by the corrections officers and state troopers processing the surrendered and wounded inmates.
There are more of those events in "The Surrendered" than in any of Lee's previous novels.
In the north, more troops came in to stabilize the surrendered cities of Mosul and Kirkuk.
By his fourth, The Surrendered, which draws on his father's war-time experience in Korea, he was a Pulitzer finalist.
It is understood that samples from the surrendered sarin have been matched to samples taken in the days after the strike.
Similar(1)
It was doing her image no favours, the surrendered-wife-cum-careworker role she had carved for herself.
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