Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Ceres" ¶ 33
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Geoffrey and Fourmyle
Using the alias " Geoffrey Fourmyle of Ceres ," Foyle re-emerges as a rich dandy who charms high society with his antics, leading a troupe of freaks called the Four Mile Circus.

Geoffrey and one
Geoffrey also names him as one of three sons of Constantine III, along with Constans II and Uther Pendragon.
The former astrologer, and scientist, Geoffrey Deans and psychologist Ivan Kelly conducted a large scale scientific test, involving more than one hundred cognitive, behavioral, physical and other variables, but found no support for astrology.
In the words of Geoffrey Crowther, then editor of The Economist, " If the economic relationships between nations are not, by one means or another, brought fairly close to balance, then there is no set of financial arrangements that can rescue the world from the impoverishing results of chaos.
Geoffrey Ashe is one dissenter from this view, believing that Geoffrey's narrative is partially derived from a lost source telling of the deeds of a 5th-century British king named Riotamus, this figure being the original Arthur, although historians and Celticists have been reluctant to follow Ashe in his conclusions.
* Richard officially proclaimed his nephew, Arthur of Brittany, son of Geoffrey, as his heir, and Tancred promised to marry one of his daughters to Arthur when he came of age, giving a further twenty thousand ounces of gold that would be returned by Richard if Arthur did not marry Tancred's daughter.
Geoffrey Donovan of the U. S. Forest Service, one of the researchers, said, " trees, which provide a range of other benefits, could improve quality of life in Portland by reducing crime ..." and he said that is because " We believe that large street trees can reduce crime by signaling to a potential criminal that a neighborhood is better cared for and, therefore, a criminal is more likely to be caught.
Geoffrey Francis Fisher, talks with Pope John XXIII for about one hour in Vatican City.
Geoffrey succeeded in beating them one after another, razed the keep of Thouars and occupied Mirebeau.
The manor of Kensington, Middlesex, was granted by William I of England to Geoffrey de Montbray or Mowbray, bishop of Coutances, one of his inner circle of advisors and one of the wealthiest men in post-Conquest England.
Geoffrey Chaucer mentions Jack Straw, one of the leaders of the revolt, in his satiric The Nun's Priest's Tale in The Canterbury Tales.
Robert married Sybilla of Conversano, daughter of Geoffrey of Brindisi, Count of Conversano ( and a grandniece of Robert Guiscard, another Norman duke ) on the way back from Crusade, one child:
One of the modern scholars who does accept this date is the historian Geoffrey Ashe, who suggests that Mons Badonicus occurred in 516, but was just one of a string of British victories.
It was alleged by Geoffrey Robertson that Widgery sent his clerk to Soho one lunchtime to buy £ 20 worth of the hardest porn he could find.
He had one older brother, William IX, Count of Poitiers ( d. 1156 ), and his younger siblings included Matilda, Duchess of Saxony ; Richard I of England ; Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany ; Eleanor, Queen of Castile ; Joan, Queen of Sicily ; and John of England.
The Prologue is the first section of four books of the Prose Edda, and consists of an euhemerized Christian account of the origins of Nordic mythology: the Nordic gods are described as human Trojan warriors who left Troy after the fall of that city ( an origin similar to the one chosen by Geoffrey of Monmouth in the 12th century to account for the ancestry of the British nation ).
The fire of 1984 affected the organ but not irreparably ; the damage hastened the time for a major restoration, which was begun in 1991 and finished two years later by Principal Pipe Organs of York, under the direction of their founder, Geoffrey Coffin, who had at one time been assistant organist at the Minster.
After Diamonds are Forever had been published, Fleming received a letter from a thirty-one-year-old Bond enthusiast and gun expert, Geoffrey Boothroyd, criticising the author's choice of firearm for Bond: his suggestions came too late to be included in From Russia, with Love, but one of Boothroyd's guns – a. 38 Smith & Wesson snub-nosed revolver modified with one third of the trigger guard removed – was used as the model for Chopping's image.
Canton and his men encounter one of Champion's friends ( Geoffrey Lewis ) leaving a cabin with Champion and his friend Nick ( Mickey Rourke ) inside, and a gun battle ensues.
Geoffrey and Matilda's marriage was not an easy one ; it had almost collapsed altogether in 1130.
In Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, she is one of the great beauties of Britain, descended from a noble Roman family and educated under duke Cador of Cornwall.
According to Orderic Vitalis only two survived by clinging to the rock all night ; one was a butcher from Rouen, the second was Geoffrey de l ' Aigle.
Washington Irving, one of America's greatest early writers, devoted " The Broken Heart " in his magnum opus The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon to the romance between Emmet and Sarah Curran, citing it as an example of how a broken heart can be fatal.

Geoffrey and identities
In the adventure Breach of the Peace, Egan and Saul, using the identities of Metropolitan Police detectives, track Solomon down and force him to take them back into the Web, but Metaphysic, a heavily guarded research project where an experiment in psychokinesis is being conducted by a Dr Hunter ( Geoffrey Beevers ) on a talented girl named Meta ( Bernadette Gepheart ), causes a tear in the Web that drags Solomon, Egan and Saul back to England ( Eye of the Beholder ) and forces them to intervene when Hunter's experiment goes out of control.

Geoffrey and Alfred
Translations into the vernacular were done by famous notables, including King Alfred ( Old English ), Jean de Meun ( Old French ), Geoffrey Chaucer ( Middle English ), Queen Elizabeth I ( Early Modern English ), and Notker Labeo ( Old High German ).
The town also has strong literary associations, as Geoffrey of Monmouth makes Caerleon one of the most important cities in Britain in his Historia Regum Britanniæ, and Alfred Lord Tennyson wrote Idylls of the King while staying there.
Caerleon also has literary associations to the legend of King Arthur through Geoffrey of Monmouth and later Arthur Machen ( who was born in Caerleon ) and Alfred Lord Tennyson wrote his Idylls of the King in Caerleon.
She returned to England in 1953 and started research in collaboration with her husband Geoffrey Burbidge, Fred Hoyle, and William Alfred Fowler.
New works have been written for and / or dedicated to him ( for solo and ensemble ) by James Patten, Elisabeth Lutyens, Reginald Smith Brindle, Alfred Nieman, Charles Camilleri, David Bedford, Roger Williams, Glen Morgan, Robert Keeley, Jeffrey Joseph, Kenneth Paige, Daniel Sturm, Vojislav Ivanovic, Betty Roe, Ivor Mairants, Geoffrey Burgon, Aurelio Peruzzi, Judith Bingham, Monique Cecconi-Botella, Ottavio Negro and Luis Morales Giacoman.
The term was coined in 1935 by the British writer Geoffrey Grigson and subsequently used by Alfred H. Barr in the context of his 1936 exhibition Cubism and Abstract Art.
They had four sons: ( Alfred ) Hubert, ( William ) Geoffrey, Kenneth Edward and Jack Hamilton and lived at 9 Highbury Street, Prospect, South Australia.
In 1940, the department was divided with Geoffrey Lloyd and Sir Alfred Faulkner becoming respectively Secretary and Permanent Under-Secretary for Petroleum and David Grenfell and Sir Alfred Hurst respectively Secretary and Permanent Under-Secretary for Mines.
Historic NEAC members and exhibitors include Thomas Kennington ( founder member and first secretary ), Frank Bramley ( foundation member ), Alfred William Rich, Margaret Preston, Walter Sickert, Augustus John, Charles Wellington Furse, William Rothenstein, Lindsay Bernard Hall, Thomas Cooper Gotch, Mary Sargant Florence, Henry Strachey, Clare Atwood, Eve Garnett, Frank McEwen, James Jebusa Shannon, James Jebusa Shannon, Cecil Mary Leslie, Mary Elizabeth Atkins, Philip Wilson Steer, Neville Bulwer-Lytton, 3rd Earl of Lytton, Muirhead Bone, Robert Polhill Bevan, Dugald Sutherland MacColl, Neville Lewis, Charles Holmes, Carron O Lodge, Geoffrey Tibble, Alexander Mann, Hercules Brabazon Brabazon and Frank Hughes.

Geoffrey and book
A. Luce or Geoffrey Warnock are long out dated, the book Berkeley's thought written by Dr Pappas is often included in lists of recommended literature on Berkeley ’ s philosophy.
In chapter 10 of book 6 of Historia Regum Britanniae, Geoffrey records that three brigandines ( or long galleys ) full of armed men commanded by two brothers, Hengist and Horsa, arrived in Britain.
The 1896 Kelmscott edition of the Works of Geoffrey Chaucer is considered a masterpiece of book design.
The Language Instinct has been criticized by Geoffrey Sampson in his book, The ' Language Instinct ' Debate.
One job he produced was to hand-copy the Carlton Football Club ensignia at the time on a book cover of the infamous Australian health practitioner, Dr. Geoffrey Edelsten.
In 2005, filmmaker Ken Burns produced a 2-part documentary about Johnson's life, Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson, based on the 2004 nonfiction book of the same name by Geoffrey C. Ward.
Based on testimonials of German civilians and military, as well as many interviews with British and American politicians and diplomats who participated at the Potsdam Conference, including Robert Murphy, the political adviser of General Eisenhower, Sir Geoffrey Harrison ( drafter of article XIII of the Potsdam Protocol concerning population transfers ), and Sir Denis Allen ( drafter of article IX on the provisional post-war borders ), the book also describes the crimes committed by the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Yugoslavia, at the end of World War II, and cites the condemnation of the expulsions by Bertrand Russell, Victor Gollancz, Bishop Bell of Chichester and other contemporary intellectuals.
This book also includes explanatory footnotes, behind-the-scenes anecdotes, and forewords by Adams and by series producer Geoffrey Perkins.
Geoffrey Sampson explains the title of his 1997 book, Educating Eve: The ' Language Instinct ' Debate, as a deliberate allusion to Educating Rita.
* Of the Wreched Engendrynge of Mankynde, Origenes upon the Maudeleyne, and The book of the Leoun-three works by Geoffrey Chaucer.
Positioning Statement As written in the highly revered book Crossing the Chasm ( Copyright 1991, by Geoffrey Moore, HarperCollins Publishers ), the position statement is a phrase so formulated:
Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High-Tech Products to Mainstream Customers or simply Crossing the Chasm ( 1991, revised 1999 ), is a marketing book by Geoffrey A. Moore that focuses on the specifics of marketing high tech products during the early start up period.
" Rip Van Winkle " was one of the first stories Irving proposed for his new book, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon.
According to a review by Geoffrey M. Hodgson, the term " social Darwinism " was first used in an English-language academic journal in an 1895 book review by the Harvard economist Frank Taussig ( it had been used as early as 1877 in Europe ).
* Mark Liberman and Geoffrey Pullum wrote a book, Far from the Madding Gerund.
King Arthur's encounter with the giant of St Michael's Mount-or Mont Saint Michel in Brittany-was related by Geoffrey of Monmouth in Historia Regum Britanniae in 1136, and published by Sir Thomas Malory in 1485 in the fifth chapter of the fifth book of Le Morte d ' Arthur: Then came to Arthur an husbandman ... and told him how there was ... a great giant which had slain, murdered and devoured much people of the country ... journeyed to the Mount, discovered the giant roasting dead children, ... and hailed him, saying ... rise and dress thee, thou glutton, for this day shalt thou die of my hand.
In 1136, Geoffrey of Monmouth reported in the first book of The History of the Kings of Britain that the indigenous giants of Cornwall were slaughtered by Brutus, the ( eponymous founder of Great Britain ), his son Corineus ( eponymous founder of Cornwall ) and his brothers who had settled in Britain after the Trojan War.
Her book From Disgust to Humanity: Sexual Orientation and the Constitution was published by Oxford University Press in 2009, as part of their " Inalienable Rights " series, edited by Geoffrey Stone.
This book, detailing Arthur's march on Rome, is heavily based on the Middle English Alliterative Morte Arthure, which in turn is heavily based on Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae.
Penrith was used as a setting in the 1940 book Cue for Treason by Geoffrey Trease.
But it took until the early 1950s for his reputation to really start to recover, stimulated by Geoffrey Grigson's 280-page book Samuel Palmer ( 1947 ) and later by an exhibition of the Shoreham work in 1957 and by Grigson's 1960 selection of Palmer's writing.
In 2008, Geoffrey McKinney published a new book of optional rules for the 1974 edition of the Dungeons and Dragons role-playing game entitled Supplement V: Carcosa.
Impetus for the Towards Healing protocols was in part led by Bishop Geoffrey Robinson, who would later call for large scale systemic reform of the church globally in his 2007 book Confronting Power and Sex in the Catholic Church: Reclaiming the Spirit of Jesus.
It is cited in books and articles dealing with intelligence, it has been mentioned in an episode of the ABC television series Castle, and used in a brand recognition example in a book by Geoffrey Miller on consumer behaviour, and even as a clue in The New York Times crossword puzzle.

5.245 seconds.