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Brandeis

American  
[bran-dahys] / ˈbræn daɪs /

noun

  1. Louis Dembitz 1856–1941, U.S. lawyer and writer: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1916–39.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The culprit, according to Blake LeBaron, an economics professor at Brandeis University, was that investors became able to follow the strategy cheaply and easily .

From MarketWatch

Ken Marcus, chair of the Brandeis Center, which filed the suit, said in a statement that the agreement was about “free speech and fairness.”

From Los Angeles Times

Mendes-Flohr was a pre-eminent scholar of modern Jewish thought and a student, at Brandeis University, of Rosenzweig’s pupil Nahum Glatzer.

From The Wall Street Journal

The suit by Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights and StandWithUs — nonprofits focused on Jewish civil rights — was filed on behalf of at least 12 Jewish parents and students who say they have faced “pervasive anti-Semitism in their California public schools,” court documents said.

From Los Angeles Times

Catherine Lhamon, the executive director of the UC Berkeley Edley Center on Law and Democracy, said the Brandeis Center and StandWithUs lawsuit appears to express a vote of “no confidence” in California’s recent legislative efforts to address antisemitism at schools.

From Los Angeles Times