a long close-fitting coat worn for riding in the 19th century
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a gambling card game in which chips are placed on the ace and king and queen and jack of separate suits (taken from a separate deck); a player plays the lowest card of a suit in his hand and successively higher cards are played until the sequence stops; the player who plays a card matching one in the layout wins all the chips on that card
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Newmarket \New"mar`ket\, n. [From Newmarket, England.] A long, closely fitting cloak.
And the knock-on effects in a place such as Newmarket extended to hotels, restaurants and even the gentlemen's outfitters, which thrive on the 50 days a year of racing and sales. Many in the racing lobby believed that 30,000 jobs were at risk.
Newmarket, like the City of London, may lose out to equine centres abroad, Cecil said, particularly if the government did not stop 'bleeding and bleeding the racing industry' through VAT and betting tax. 'They're very shortsighted.
It opened electronically. In I ventured, nursing my car over the sleeping policemen that are one of the millionaire-hallmarks of big-scale racing estates, from Newmarket to Normandy to blue-grass Kentucky.
By the time Canadian sales started falling, Hyundai had committed itself to the parts plant at Newmarket and the Bromont assembly plant.
It pledged to proceed with a $259 million manufacturing plant in Bromont, Quebec, and $16 million parts factory in Newmarket, Ontario.
They must be feeling pretty flat in Newmarket after seeing the latest official perk granted to South Africa's small but influential racing industry.
Vitronics Corp., Newmarket, N.H., says that sales of a terpenebased board-cleaning machine have been brisk.