T Fairman Ordish - definição. O que é T Fairman Ordish. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é T Fairman Ordish - definição

PROFESSOR OF LAW
Christopher Fairman; Chris Fairman; Chris M. Fairman

T. Fairman Ordish         
BRITISH FOLKLORIST (1855–1924)
T. F. Ordish
Thomas Fairman Ordish (1855-1924), sometimes also referred to as T. Fairman Ordish was a British folklorist, noted for his interest in traditional drama and folk play, early theatre (especially the plays of William Shakespeare) and the history of London.
George Fairman         
  • Music published by Fairman
Draft:George Fairman; George Wayne Fairman
George Wayne Fairman (1881–1962) was a lyricist, composer, and music publisher whose work includes popular songs. Several of his songs charted including two that reached #1.
Ordish–Lefeuvre system         
  • Albert Bridge was augmented with conventional suspension chains in 1887 and with central supports in 1972
EARLY FORM OF CABLE-STAYED BRIDGE DESIGN
Ordish-Lefeuvre Principle; Ordish–Lefeuvre Principle; Ordish-Lefeuvre system
The Ordish–Lefeuvre system or principle is an early form of cable-stayed bridge design, patented by English engineers Rowland Mason Ordish and William Henry Le Feuvre in 1858.

Wikipédia

Christopher M. Fairman

Christopher M. Fairman (July 26, 1960 – July 22, 2015) was a professor of law at Ohio State University Moritz College of Law and Associate Dean for Faculty. He was also the C. William O'Neill Professor in Law and Judicial Administration.

Fairman was born in Kansas. He was awarded the "Outstanding Professor Award 2003" by the Graduating Class of 2003.

Fairman's article "Fuck", published in 2007 by Cardozo Law Review, examines the legal implications of the use of the word fuck. Fairman's article quickly became one of the most downloaded scholarly legal articles on the Internet, leading to some controversy in Brian Leiter's list of "Most Downloaded Law Faculties, 2006" because Brian Leiter chose to omit Ohio State and Emory University School of Law (where Fairman was a visiting professor) from the list. Leiter argued that without Fairman's article, neither school would be close to the top 15.

In 2009 Fairman followed up this article with the book Fuck: Word Taboo and Protecting Our First Amendment Liberties, published by Sphinx.

Fairman's primary areas of focus were civil procedure and heightened pleading.

He died of cardiac arrest at the age of 54 on July 22, 2015. At the time of his death, Fairman's 2007 Cardozo Law Review article, "Fuck" was still classed with the 20 top downloaded works on the Social Science Research Network.