See Also: Moynihan, Berkeley George Andrew(encyclopedia)
Berkeley, George(encyclopedia)
Moynihan (as used in expressions)(encyclopedia)
Moynihan, Daniel Patrick(encyclopedia)
UC Berkeley(dictionary)
Berkeley(encyclopedia)
Berkeley(dictionary)
Berkeley (as used in expressions)(encyclopedia)
Berkeley Square(dictionary)
Berkeley, Busby(encyclopedia)

free house (oh) and Moynihan, Berkeley George Andrew (sh)


free house (oh)



n [C]
in Britain, a pub that can buy beer from different breweries (=a company that makes beer etc) , rather than being controlled by one brewery

Moynihan, Berkeley George Andrew (sh)




later Baron Moynihan (of Leeds)

born Oct. 2, 1865, Malta
died Sept. 7, 1936, Carr Manor, Leeds, Yorkshire, Eng.

British surgeon and teacher of medicine.

He wrote or cowrote authoritative monographs on surgery to treat diseases of various abdominal organs, as well as Abdominal Operations (1905), a standard text for two decades, and Duodenal Ulcer (1910), which secured his reputation as a clinical scientist. He stressed obtaining medical evidence from living bodies on the operating table rather than from autopsies. He helped found the British Journal of Surgery (1913) and organizations to promote nationwide and international communication among surgeons and specialists. He was raised to the peerage in 1929.