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', and chamber
One of these candies, sometimes referred to as a ' chamber spice ', was made with cloves, ginger, aniseed, juniper berries, almonds and pine kernels dipped in melted sugar.
The typical of Second and Third Dynasty mastabas was the ' stairway mastaba ', the tomb chamber of which sank deeper than before and was connected to the top with inclined shaft and stairs.
The Council claimed that this would protect against the ' Tyranny of the majority ', expressing concerns that without a system of checks and balances extremists would use the single chamber parliaments to restrict the rights of minority groups.
She claimed that in March 1534 the Duke ‘ locked me up in a chamber, took away my jewels and apparel ', and then moved her to Redbourn, Hertfordshire, where she lived a virtual prisoner with a meagre annual allowance of only £ 200.
Tallis's monopoly covered ' set songe or songes in parts ', and he composed in English, Latin, French, Italian, or other tongues as long as they served for music in the Church or chamber.
This large chamber, the ' town hall ', ( and its later variant ' city hall ') has become synonymous with the whole building, and with the administrative body housed in it.
The English and French term odalisque ( rarely odalique ) derives from the Turkish ' oda ', meaning " chamber "; thus an odalisque originally meant a chamber girl or attendant.
* Gerard Hoffnung's fictional creation, Bruno Heinz Jaja, is credited with the composition for chamber ensemble ' Punkt Kontrapunkt ', performed at the 1958 Hoffnung Music Festival ( to a score in fact written by Humphrey Searle ), whose climax is ' three bars of silence-the first is in 7 / 8, the third also is in 7 / 8, but the middle bar of silence ... is in 3 / 4 time, and this gives the whole work a quasi-Viennese effect '.
It was not until 1453 that the first mention was made of a two chamber legislative body in which the ' lords ' of the kingdom were represented in a ' council of lords ', however, by 1493 the Sejm, made up of the King, Senate and Chamber of Envoys was finally established as a permanent legislative body for the Polish kingdom.
His underground prison was known as the ' chamber of truth ', and most of Paraguay's manufactures were made with prison labour.
Camarasaurus ( ) meaning ' chambered lizard ', referring to the hollow chambers in its vertebrae ( Greek καμαρα / kamara meaning ' vaulted chamber ', or anything with an arched cover, and σαυρος / sauros meaning ' lizard ') was a genus of quadrupedal, herbivorous dinosaurs.
The symmetrical and simple designed on the exterior is in sharp contrast with the complex interior floor plan, of inner chambers, which is a square ' ninefold plan ', where eight two-storyed vaulted chambers radiate from the central, double-height domed chamber.
Cobbett ( b 1847 ), a chamber-music specialist, had founded the Cobbett Competition in 1905 for a short form of String Quartet composition or ' Phantasy ', and for other short chamber works, prizes won variously by William Yeates Hurlstone ( 1876-1906, pianist ) ( 1905 ), Frank Bridge ( 1908 ), John Ireland ( 1909 ), J. Cliffe Forrester ( 1916 ), H. Waldo Warner ( viola of the London Quartet ) ( 1916 ), York Bowen ( 1918 ) and Cecil Armstrong Gibbs ( 1919 ).
Access to the water is made via the ' wet porch ', a chamber equipped with a moon pool, which keeps the air pressure inside the wet porch the same as the water pressure at that depth (' ambient pressure '), about 2. 6 atmospheres, through hydrostatic equilibrium.
The word Mŵd in early Welsh means ' vault ' or ' chamber ', and there is no evidence that there was ever a motte and bailey castle at Aber.
Apart from the aesthetic-ethical ' message ', which is also the subject of most of his songs, Vermeulen's symphonies and chamber music offer an ingenious interplay of melodies, a colorful ( orchestral ) sound with many felicitous instrumental ideas, fascinating sound fields, innovating parallel harmony and a captivating canon technique.
' at the top of his voice, or Brian, a security guard, of acres of empty space, a ' post-Modernist gas chamber ', " whom Johnny marks down as indeed possessing the most tedious job in the world.
In inventories of deceased clock makers, lantern clocks are usually referred to as ' house clocks ', ' chamber clocks ' or simply ' clocks ', since in 17th century England they were almost the only type of domestic clocks that existed.
It played almost exclusively at 16 ', though it was used commonly as a chamber and solo instrument ( even from the 17th century ) and was the preferred double bass instrument in the Viennese Classical period ( c. 1760-1820 ).
For 1983, he composed an opera for Les Luthiers, titled ' Cardoso en Gulevandia ' ( libretto by Mundstock ), as well as a chamber piece for quartet called ' Entreteniciencia familiar ', where he, paradoxically, didn't perform.
A small chamber, usually at the back, forms the ' chaitya ', the prayer hall.

', and northwestern
* Nicomedia in northwestern Asia Minor ( modern Izmit in Turkey ), a base for defence against invasion from the Balkans and Persia's Sassanids was the capital of Diocletian, the eastern ( and most senior ) Augustus ; in the final reorganisation by Constantine the Great, in 318, the equivalent of his domain, facing the most redoubtable foreign enemy, Sassanid Persia, became the pretorian prefecture Oriens ' the East ', the core of later Byzantium.
The county is roughly rectangular, bound in the north by the Township of Portland in Papineau County ( 45 degrees N 41 ', 12 km ), entirely in the east by the Township of Buckingham in Papineau County ( 75 degrees W 33 ', 22 km ), on its northwestern corner by the Township of Wakefield in Gatineau, and on its west by the Township of Hull in Gatineau County.
Pinus gerardiana, known as the Chilgoza Pine ( Urdu: چلغوزا پائن in Persian it means 40 nuts in one cone: چهل و غوزه ), ' noosa ', or ' neoza ', is a pine native to the northwestern Himalaya in eastern Afghanistan, Pakistan, and northwest India, growing at elevations between 1800 – 3350 m. It often occurs in association with Blue Pine ( Pinus wallichiana ) and Deodar Cedar ( Cedrus deodara ).
Tuscarora, sometimes called Skarò ˙ rə ̨ ˀ ', is an Iroquoian language of the Tuscarora people, spoken in southern Ontario, Canada, and northwestern New York around Niagara Falls, in the United States.

', and corner
In 1857, in an area now known as either ' the top of the town ', or Hoadley's Corner, the Hoadley family of Heathfield established a large department store, of which the original building still stands, on the corner of Station Road and Junction Road.
Although there are a lot of toponyms referring to the many oaks, the word eyck is similar to the German word ' ecke ', which means ' corner '.
The receiver, known as a ' cutter ', stands in the backcourt, along with the other two players ( the cutter's partner stands behind him, with the server's partner in the bottom right corner ).
The cutter will then smash the ball overarm so that it is ' up ', usually into the corner, so that the ball hits the right then the front wall and goes straight back at the server.
* On the 20 June 1835 Soane was presented by Sir Jeffry Wyattville with a Gold Medal, from the ' Architects of England ', modelled by Francis Leggatt Chantrey it showed the likeness of Soane on one side and the north-west corner of the Bank of England on the other.
', giving rise to the building's four corner towers.
The agreed boundary was the Argun River north to its confluence with the Shilka River, up the Shilka to the ' Gorbitsa River ', up the Gorbitsa to its headwaters, then along the east-west watershed through the Stanovoy Mountains and down the Uda River ( Khabarovsk Krai ) to the Sea of Okhotsk at its southwest corner.
But the style of the two letters is not fully identical: in roman fonts, < span style =" font-family: times, ' Times New Roman ', serif ; font-size: larger ">⟨ И ⟩</ span > has heavier vertical strokes and serifs on all four corners, whereas < span style =" font-family: times, ' Times New Roman ', serif ; font-size: larger ">⟨ N ⟩</ span > has a heavier diagonal stroke and lacks a serif on the bottom-right corner.
' Heron-hald ', meaning the corner of the forest where Herons ( large birds ) live.
' Erne-Halh ' or ' Erne-Haugh ', meaning ' Eagle's nook ' or corner.
The appearance of the bushfire effectively prevents the player from ' camping ', or placing Sabreman in a corner with the fire button depressed and amassing points from dispatching the constant stream of jungle creatures that appear.
The Maori called this area, particularly the south of the current Newmarket, Te Tī Tūtahi, ' the cabbage tree standing alone ' or ' the cabbage tree of singular importance ', referring to a tree which stood on the corner of Mortimer Pass and Broadway ( according to other references at the corner of Clovernook Road and Broadway ) until 1908.
Although it took Constantine eighteen years to become sole ruler of the Empire, he may have retained an interest in Eboracum and the reconstruction of the south-west front of the fortress with polygonally-fronted interval towers and the two great corner towers, one of which, the ' Multangular Tower ', still survives, is probably his work.
Two other tributes two ex-players at the ground are the naming of the South-East quadrant the ' Jack Fish corner ', and the road the stadium is on is named ' Mike Gregory Way '.
With space being a premium at the office on Colindale Avenue, ATL was relocated to an office in the top floor of a separate building ; Capitol House on Capitol Way, just around the corner, where they continued the design of CPU and GPU products and maintained ' BRender ', Argonaut's proprietary software 3D engine.
The south-western corner of the suburb boasts a large shopping centre called the ' Moore Park Supa Centre ', on South Dowling Street.
Broom Bridge is the location where Sir William Rowan Hamilton, following a ' eureka experience ', first wrote down the fundamental formula for quaternions on October 16, 1843, which is to this day commemorated by a stone plaque on the northwest corner of the underside of the bridge.
The listed public house on the corner of Bishopsgate Street and Tennant Street, currently known as ' The City Tavern ', was fully restored as part of the development.
Whalley Range 11 – 18 High School and Business and Enterprise College is a large non-denominational secondary school for girls on Wilbraham Road, where it moved in the 1930s from a smaller site on the corner of Burford Road and Withington Road ( known then as ' Britannia Row ', because of the large statue of Britannia on its frontage ) The anomalous bulge and bend in Withington Road at this point is explained by the need for a wide entrance to this building.
Blakenhall's name, according to topynmists comes from the Old English ' blæc ', meaning ' black ' or dark coloured, & ' halh ' meaning ' nook ' or ' corner '.

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