McCoy$47372$ - translation to Αγγλικά
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McCoy$47372$ - translation to Αγγλικά

BRITISH POLITICIAN
William Frederick McCoy; W F McCoy; W.F. McCoy; WF McCoy

McCoy      
n. McCoy, familienaam; Elijah J. McCoy (1843-1929), Amerikaanse uitvinder die is geprezen om zijn uitvindingen (inclusief buiging van ijzerplaat en de automatische sprinklerinstallatie)
the real McCoy         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Real McCoy (disambiguation); The real McCoy (disambiguation)
(Slang) echt of origineel persoon of ding; het echte, het waarachtige (geen surrogaat)
love boat         
  • The cast members in costume, 2015; l–r: Kopell, Grandy, Lange, MacLeod, Tewes & Whelan
  • ''Pacific Princess'', the main vessel used on the show, off the US West Coast in 1987.
AMERICAN COMEDY DRAMA TELEVISION SERIES
Love boat; Love Boat, The; Love Boat; Captain Stubing; Marshall Stubing; Merill Stubing; Isaac Washington; Adam Bricker; Judy McCoy; The Love Boat: A Valentine Voyage; The Love Boat II; Merrill Stubbing; Merryl Stubing
liefdesschip, avonturenschip

Ορισμός

McCoy
¦ noun (in phr. the real McCoy) informal the real thing; the genuine article.
Origin
C19: origin uncertain: perh. from the real Mackay, an advertising slogan used by the whisky distillers G. Mackay and Co.; the form McCoy may come from the name of the American inventor Elijah McCoy.

Βικιπαίδεια

W. F. McCoy

William Frederick McCoy (1886 – 4 December 1976) was an Ulster Unionist member of the Parliament of Northern Ireland for South Tyrone who went on to become an early supporter of Ulster nationalism.

Born in Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, McCoy was educated at Clones High School and Trinity College Dublin, where he studied law. After serving in the British Army during World War I McCoy became a barrister in 1920 and held a number of leading legal positions in Northern Ireland including Crown Prosecutor for County Fermanagh (from 1926), Resident Magistrate for Belfast (1937–1943) and Senior Crown Prosecutor for Belfast (1949–1967).

Initially elected to the Parliament in a by-election on 12 April 1945 (following the death of Rowley Elliott the previous year), McCoy held the seat for the Ulster Unionists until his retirement in 1965. Whilst at first his political viewpoints were fairly typical of Unionism at the time, McCoy began to doubt how far the Union was safeguarded by the existing status of Northern Ireland as it was entirely determined by the United Kingdom, whom, he felt, could as easily vote it out of existence as retain it. As a result, McCoy called for Northern Ireland to be governed as a Dominion within the Commonwealth, along the lines of Australia and Canada, with the British monarch retained as Head of State, but with the Northern Irish Parliament otherwise free to govern.

McCoy's ideas were generally rejected by the Unionist establishment, who were generally happy with the way things were, and he was sidelined, although he did serve as Speaker of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland in 1956 during a brief period when the long-term Speaker Sir Norman Stronge was forced to step aside. An office Stronge held was found to disqualify him, but he resigned it and a Bill was rushed through Parliament to indemnify him. McCoy stepped down from the Northern Ireland House of Commons in 1965, when his seat was won by John Taylor. McCoy continued to write in support of his Dominion plans until his death in 1976.