View example sentences and word forms for Oakeshott.

Oakeshott

Oakeshott meaning

A surname

Example sentences (16)

The relatively comprehensive Oakeshott typology was created by historian and illustrator Ewart Oakeshott as a way to define and catalogue European swords of the medieval period based on physical form, including blade shape and hilt configuration.

But I admit I have been a little naïve in trusting Isabel Oakeshott with 100,000 of my Whats Apps while working together on the Pandemic Diaries.

Morar Oakeshott House is a relatively new addition to Stirling, however staff and residents there were among the first to volunteer to hold a collection for the appeal, ensuring a host of toys were picked up.

Ms Oakeshott was given copies of the texts while helping Mr Hancock write his book, Pandemic Diaries.

Oakeshott said he was 'extremely troubled at how to respond to this, and I don't blame him'.

The communications were leaked to The Telegraph by Oakeshott after she collaborated with Hancock for his controversial es memoir, which was published in December last year ahead of a public inquiry into the government’s response to the pandemic.

Whether Oakeshott and the Telegraph will get away with the breach depends on whether Hancock goes to court to seek enforcement of the NDA and even damages for the violation of the contract.

Why did Oakeshott do this?

The role of spreading Downing Street’s message in daily televised briefings is thought likely to go to a woman, with Sky’s Sophy Ridge and Brexiteer journalist Isabel Oakeshott supposedly in the frame.

From and Hume to Maitland and Oakeshott, British philosophers have offered a continuous reflection on our social and cultural inheritance, with a view to understanding the fundamental idea on which conservatism has been founded – the idea of belonging.

Lord Oakeshott, a former Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman, said: “Ms Leadsom is sailing pretty close to the wind.

They are all in the grip of a dogmatic certainty about Brexit that would have Burke and Oakeshott reaching for the smelling salts.

Ewart Oakeshott (1980), p.53 Glaive A glaive is a polearm consisting of a single-edged tapering blade similar in shape to a modern kitchen knife on the end of a pole.

Ewart Oakeshott has proposed an alternative description of the weapon as a crescent shaped socketed axe.

Oakeshott (1980), p.55 The half-pike, sometimes known as a boarding pike, was also used as a weapon on board ships until the 19th century.

Oakeshott (1980), p.56 Cavalry At the start of the Renaissance, cavalry remained predominantly lance-armed; gendarmes with the heavy knightly lance and lighter cavalry with a variety of lighter lances.