refer-from
21refer to — index allude, appeal, ascribe, bear (adduce), cite (state), concern (involve) …
22refer to for information — index consult (seek information from) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
23From the New World (Disambiguation) — From the New World may refer to:* Symphony No. 9 (Dvořák) (in full: Symphony No. 9, in E Minor From the New World (Op. 95)), composed by Antonin Dvořák * , video game by Nautilus * , collection of essays by Sarah Vowell …
24refer — [rɪ fə:] verb (refers, referring, referred) 1》 (refer to) mention or allude to. ↘(refer someone to) direct the attention of someone to. ↘(refer to) (of a word or phrase) describe or denote. 2》 (refer something to) pass a matter to (a… …
25refer — 01. Once she had forgiven her husband for cheating on her, she never [referred] to the incident again. 02. Do you mind if I use you as a [reference] when I apply for a job at the company where you work? 03. You need a [referral] from your doctor… …
26refer — [c]/rəˈfɜ / (say ruh fer) verb (referred, referring) –verb (t) 1. to direct the attention or thoughts of: the asterisk refers the reader to a footnote. 2. to direct for information or for anything required: to refer students to books on a subject …
27From Autumn to Ashes — Infobox musical artist Name = From Autumn To Ashes Img capt = Francis Mark (pictures) performs in From Autumn to Ashes, December 2006. Img size = Landscape = Background = group or band Alias = Origin = Long Island, New York, USA flagicon|USA… …
28refer — [14] To refer something is etymologically to ‘carry it back’. The word comes via Old French referer from Latin referre, a compound verb formed from the prefix re ‘back’ and ferre ‘carry’ (source of English fertile and related to English bear). Of …
29refer — When a case or action involves matters of account or other intricate details which require minute examination, and for that reason are not fit to be brought before & jury, it is common to refer the whole case, or some part of it, to the decision… …
30refer — [14] To refer something is etymologically to ‘carry it back’. The word comes via Old French referer from Latin referre, a compound verb formed from the prefix re ‘back’ and ferre ‘carry’ (source of English fertile and related to English bear). Of …