ourselves
n.
our own persons; to our own persons; by our own persons; us; by us
Sinn Féin
Sinn Féin (
pronounced in
English, in
Irish) is a name used by a series of Irish political movements of the 20th century, each of which claimed sole descent from the original party established by
Arthur Griffith in 1905. The name means "ourselves" or "we ourselves", though it has often been incorrectly translated as "ourselves alone" or "we alone" (see
Sinn Féin (19th century)). The name originally came from a newspaper that was printed as a local paper in
Oldcastle, County Meath. Arthur Griffith asked the publishers if he could use the name of their paper for a new political party that he was setting up and they gave him permission to use the paper's name.
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Ourselves
(pron.)
; sing. Ourself (/). An emphasized form of the pronoun of the first person plural; -- used as a subject, usually with we; also, alone in the predicate, in the nominative or the objective case.
(pl. )
of Myself
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
ourselves
pl. pron.
ہم تم آپ, ہميں ہم, ہم دونوں
ourselves
ourselves /,auə'selvz/
đại từ phản thân bản thân chúng ta, bản thân chúng tôi, bản thân chúng mình; tự chúng mìnhwe ourselves will see to it: bản thân chúng tôi sẽ chăm lo việc đó chúng tôi, chúng mình (khi nói trước công chúng, khi viết một bài báo không ký tên)it will do good to all and to ourselves: cái đó sẽ có lợi cho mọi người và cho chúng mình
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