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Some Related Sentences

** and Anglo-Saxon
** Anglo-Saxon subgroup
** Witenagemot, the High Council of Anglo-Saxon England
** Fríge, the Anglo-Saxon equivalent of Frigg: Friday
** Anglo-Saxon Charters, Sawyer nos.
** Old English language, Anglo-Saxon, the ancestor of modern English
** Anglo-Saxon burh
** Anglo-Saxon bluberhūs = " the house ( s ) which is / are at the bubbling stream ", with a later regularised plural ; the-um form came from the Anglo-Saxon dative plural case æt bluberhūsum
** Both letters were also used by Anglo-Saxon scribes who also used the Runic letter Wynn to represent / w /.
** proto-Indo-European — Proto-Germanic — Anglo-Saxon
** East Danes, an Anglo-Saxon ethnonym used in the epic Beowulf
** Bretwalda, high kings of Anglo-Saxon England.
** Anglo-Saxon England ( 597 – 1066 )
** Rohirric, ( translated with Anglo-Saxon )
** A. viii: Bilingual Canterbury Epitome ( Anglo-Saxon Chronicle F )
** B. x. 165 Anglo-Saxon rune poem ( destroyed in 1731 )

** and England
** Lammas ( England, Scotland, Neopagans )
** British-Americans and on-going developments in New England cuisine, the national traditions founded in cuisine of the thirteen colonies and some aspects of other regional cuisine.
** William of Ockham ( Church of England )
** Roman Britain or Britannia, a Roman province covering most of modern England and Wales and some of southern Scotland from 43 to 410 AD
** Morecambe Bay-largest intertidal bay in England
** C. v. marilandicus ( Linnaeus, 1758 )-coastal New England to Pennsylvania and central Virginia
** Christchurch ( UK Parliament constituency ), England, centered on the town
** New England fiddling, with strong influences from Québécois and British repertoires.
** Botolph ( England )
** Midsummer Day ( England )
** Ephrem the Syrian ( Roman Catholic Church and Church of England )
** Evelyn Underhill ( Church of England and the Episcopal Church of the United States )
** Chad of Mercia ( Church of England )
** Historic start of the new year ( Lady Day ) in England, Wales, Ireland, and the future United States until the adoption of the Gregorian Calendar in 1752.
** Division of New England, an electoral district in the Australian House of Representatives, in New South Wales
** University of New England ( Australia ), based in Armidale, New South Wales
** Edmund the Martyr ( Church of England )
** Forty Martyrs of England and Wales
** In the 1971 film Dad's Army, German aircrew with photographs vital to the invasion crash land in England.
** Paulinus of York ( in England )
** International Origin Match, England vs Exiles
** Old Believings It was believed that in England in the 14th century, that plains of any kind is where the dead wandered searching for their revenge.
** English Reformation, series of events in 16th century England by which the church in England broke away from the authority of the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church

** and their
** French Americans and their " New World " regional identities such as:
** Old English, their language
** Marching band, a group of performers that consist of instrumental musicians who generally perform outdoors and incorporate some type of marching ( and possibly other movements ) with their musical performance
** dry summer, wet winter: Most regions of the earth receive most of their rainfall during the summer months ; Mediterranean climate regions receive their rainfall during the winter months.
** The Cars ( album ), their debut album
** Color charge, a property of quarks and gluons, related to their strong interactions
** Itemized deduction, eligible expense that individual taxpayers in the United States can report on their Federal income tax returns
** Standard deduction, dollar amount that non-itemizers may subtract from their income
** Nazarov was Dictator of the Don Republic ( which before, since its founding on 2 December 1917 at Novocherkassk, had been governed by a Triumvirate including the last pre-Soviet Ataman, Aleksei Maksimovich Kaledin ) from 11 February 1918 till 25 February 1918 when Bolshevik troops ended their existence
** or by additional elements ( such as " link " or " meta " in HTML and XHTML ) within their own attributes,
** coathanger – slang for high contact to the head, usually by a stiff arm, which causes a player to land flat on their back.
** Structural mapping: the locations of the major rock units and the faults and folds that led to their placement there.
** Ionic crystal, a crystal consisting of ions bound together by their electrostatic attraction
** Teacher induction, the support and guidance provided to novice educators in the early stages of their careers
** for their fundamental path-breaking work in combinatorial optimization.
** for their seminal and profound contributions in continuous optimization.
** for their fundamental contributions to performance analysis and optimization of stochastic systems
** Moral relativism maintains that all moral judgments have their origins either in societal or in individual standards, and that no single objective standard exists by which one can assess the truth of a moral proposition.
** USA Networks ( also including what is now called Syfy ) – Paramount owned a stake starting in 1982, 50 % owner ( with Universal Studios ) from 1987 until 1997, when Paramount / Viacom sold their stake to Universal ( now part of NBCUniversal )
** Pipeline ( Unix ), a set of process chained by their standard streams
** The Treaty of Münster ( Instrumentum Pacis Monasteriensis, IPM ), concerning the Holy Roman Emperor and France and their respective allies.
** The Treaty of Osnabrück ( Instrumentum Pacis Osnabrugensis, IPO ), concerning the Holy Roman Emperor, the Empire and Sweden and their respective allies.

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