rudish

rudish

(ˈruːdɪʃ)
adj
somewhat rude
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
The third obstacle is the general lack of research on NFC noise and SNR performance; Sussman-Fort and Rudish [5] and Jacob and Sievenpiper [23] provided conflicting results on SNR performance in HF.
The groomsmen were high school friends Roman Tillman, Damon Rudish, and Jesse Capik, and Pi Kappa Phi fraternity brothers Dylan Pair, John Gernon Glorioso, Ryan Soto logo, Jeff Songer, and Drew Etheridge.
Rudish, "Non-Foster impedance matching of electrically-small antennas," IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, Vol.
Russ Rudish, Deloitte's Health Care Providers sector leader, says the current KLAS rankings may reflect a shift in how CIOs are using the rankings to evaluate systems.
"If someone had run 1:43 in the 'A' race I would have been gutted to miss out, but as it was I didn't really miss anything as Kenyan David Rudish a won in 1:45.82.
Screenplay, Charlie Bean, Lauren Faust, McCracken, Paul Rudish, Don Shank.
"Most people will say this train has left the station," says Russ Rudish, a senior healthcare consultant with New York-based Deloitte LLC.
To play on a famous phrase from the advertising world, "It's Not Your Father's Economic Downturn." With that uncertainty in mind, HRCM Senior Edit, or Daphne Lawrence recently sat down with Russ Rudish, vice chairman and leader of New York-based Deloitte s U.S.
And the increased stature is a trend, according to Russ Rudish, health care providers sector leader at Deloitte (New York), who now sees more CIOs reporting to CEOs.
"Back in the day, the revenue gotten on the physician side was much lower than it is today," says Russ Rudish, health care providers sector leader, Deloitte LLP (New York).