0 in the past in England, a man who owned most of the land around a village --
1 to take someone places: --
Skinner uses the plane to squire around bureaucrats.
2 (in the past in England) a man who owned most of the land around a village --
3 to take someone places; escort: --
Skinner uses the plane to squire around bureaucrats.
In the country, the rector was often hardly distinguishable in manners, dress, and accoutrements from the local squire.
While a gentleman, he is only a small squire with an income of eight hundred pounds a year.
The gentle patriarchy hinges on an affectionate "intercourse between the squire and his son," neither of whom exercises his patriarchal authority.
Squire interpreted his solution as a jet emerging from a hole in a plane wall.
However, in order to capture the instability using numerical simulations, we need not provide the actual eigenfunctions for the squire mode in the initial conditions.
The position of the squire as the foundational figure of the community depends on the fatherson lineage and its exclusion of women.
The younger son of the local squire, he is a naturalist who collects specimens and contributes articles to scientific journals.
The rents from the latter helped expand the textile business, and the successful clothier-landowner rarely deserted manufacturing for the life of a petty squire.