(New Testament) supposed brother of St. James; one of the Apostles who is invoked in prayer when a situation seems hopeless.
A New Testament book attributed to Saint Jude.
1He said St. Jude reported relatively strong ICD sales earlier this week.
2Jude had always seen the invisible people-theywere nothing new to her.
3We first meet Jude and his impossibly bright friends in New York.
4St. Jude Medical reduced its selling, general and administrative expenses 18 percent.
5That's what Jude must have told her: he was a produce supplier.
6Representatives for Abbott and St. Jude were not immediately available for comment.
7Jude smiled at Sweet's question, but his heart rushed a few beats.
8Now she wouldn't be able to visit Jude again, for any reason.
9Vespasian was at that time conducting the war in Jude'a, in Asia.
10Jude's clan is not good at marriage and he proves no exception.
11Jude told her everything would be fine, Leonard was a good man.
12Joining us to discuss the change is IndieWire film reporter Jude Dry.
13Jude settled behind a glass desk that held nothing except a laptop.
14St. Jude shares remained down about 8 percent from previous trading levels.
15Jude did not step forward but took a staggering, unsteady step back.
16Jude was crashing the furniture to pieces in a frenzy of revenge.