estrich


Also found in: Wikipedia.

estrich

(ˈɛstrɪtʃ) or

estridge

n
(Animals) obsolete ostrich
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
Mentioned in ?
References in periodicals archive ?
Though they are not included in this trailer, the film also features John Lithgow as Ailes, Malcolm McDowell as mogul Rupert Murdoch, Connie Britton as Ailes' wife, Allison Janney as Ailes' legal counsel Susan Estrich, Alice Eve as 'Fox & Friends' co-host Ainsley Earhardt and Alanna Ubach as Jeanine Pirro of Fox News' 'Justice With Judge Jeanine.'
Susan Estrich, Ailes attorney, told Variety on July 19 that Ailes continues to work for Fox News under his current employment contract--a statement echoed by the media conglomerate.
Also relocating within the building are RCG Longview and Estrich & Co.
Susan Estrich, a high-profile lawyer and law professor at theUniversity of Southern California law schooland a legal contributor to the Fox News cable channel, made the admission in a filing on Thursday to the court's San Jose division.
We are all over the nation's editorial and op-ed pages, with Bill O'Reilly, Michelle Malkin, Michael Barone, Susan Estrich, Mona Charen, Thomas Sowell, Mark Shields, Walter Williams, Connie Schultz, Steve Chapman, Jacob Sullum, Froma Harrop, Lenore Skenazy, Larry Elder, Jim Hightower, Debra Saunders, Roger Simon, Suzanne Fields, Robert Scheer, Phyllis Schlafly, Alexander Cockburn, Brent Bozell, Pat Buchanan, Linda Chavez, David Limbaugh, Chuck Norris, John Stossel, Tony Blankley, Oliver North, David Sirota, Roland Martin, Larry Kudlow, and many more.
"This is not the final word in this case," Mattel lawyer Susan Estrich said.
Like Estrich, I, too, want to put my cards on the table.
To refute the claims of national commentator Susan Estrich, who in a May 25 column, "The Responsibility Is Ours," targeted the industry for contributing to Mexico's border problems, Steve Sanetti, NSSF president, wrote a rebuttal, stating, "Let's clear this up right now."
Estrich, Caringella says, simply does not come to grips with the reality that if a jury were directed to figure out what a "reasonable person" would have done, it would be likely to apply a "male point of view" to the task.