Examples of using Macklin in English and their translations into Hebrew
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
Macklin too.
Billy Macklin.
Mr. Macklin, that is your shark.
Tommy Macklin?
Will Macklin, traffic investigator.
Thomas Macklin.
Pfc Macklin has been charged with treason.
Charles Macklin.
Forget it, Macklin, you're too late--- I'm sorry, guys.
Alexander Macklin.
Mr. Macklin, make no mistake. We are committing a felony here.
You, too, Macklin.
In 1926 Macklin established a practice in Dundee, where he would work for the next 21 years.
I'm sorry, Mr. Macklin.
I know Macklin paid you.
Alexander Hepburne Macklin.
Charles Macklin Cibber.
Yeah, to drop off Macklin.
Because you knew that Macklin gave back a shark, and you knew who he gave it to-- the aqua vet.
In Rio,Shackleton suffered a heart attack but would not let Macklin examine him.
Like Macklin before him, he made his reputation as Shylock, premiering in the role in 1814.
Well, you may not know that name, but he's the man Macklin Tyler calls when it's closing time.
From 1741 to 1747, Charles Macklin, Cibber, Samuel Foote, and others sometimes produced plays there either by use of a temporary licence or by subterfuge;
Actor Edmund Kean was the on-stage highlight; like Macklin before him, he made his reputation as Shylock, premiering in the role in 1814.
Macklin appears backstage, wandering the corridor which now stands in the spot where, in 1735, he killed fellow actor Thomas Hallam in an argument over a wig.
Early in the morning of 5 January, Macklin was called to Shackleton's quarters to find him having another heart attack.
Author John Macklin includes an account in his 1965 book, Strange Destinies, of two green children who arrived in the Spanish village of Banjos in 1887.
When the family returned to England Dr Macklin set up practice in the Scilly Isles, where young Macklin became an enthusiastic and proficient boat handler.
It was during this period that actor Charles Macklin(a native of Inishowen in County Donegal in Ulster) rose to fame, propelled by a singular performance as Shylock in an early 1741 production of The Merchant of Venice, in which he introduced a realistic, naturalistic style of acting, abandoning the artificial bombast typical to dramatic roles prior.
In the middle of May his associate Alexander Macklin, who was in Canada negotiating the purchase of dogs, received a telegram notifying him that the destination was now to be the Antarctic;