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cherished and historic
The campground's gingerbread cottages are cherished historic landmarks as well as very expensive real estate.
The fire devastated many citizens that cherished the historic feel of the city.
Several cherished historic resources include the various Works Progress Administration ( WPA ) projects located within the city.
Other historic spots, religious shrine, natural and scenic spots, parks and other man made attractions is cherished places of the beautiful town of Basud.

cherished and feature
The chief feature of the rooms was his noble library, the cherished collection of a lifetime.
His paintings can be read in many ways, but he cherished the premise of the human figure-a prominent feature in many of his works-as being symbolic of the journey of life.

cherished and hill
As first chairman of the Commission he was able to put into practice all over Britain this ‘ long cherished dream ’ of repopulating the hill country, thanks to his good contacts in government.

cherished and is
Considering then the optimism which has permeated science fiction for so long, what is really remarkable is that during the last twelve years many science-fiction writers have turned about and attacked their own cherished vision of the future, have attacked the Childhood's End kind of faith that science and technology will inevitably better the human condition.
The governor and his retinue thoughtfully brought with them a glorious silver punchbowl which is still one of the cherished possessions of the college.
That rare type of achievement by a woman prompted one local newspaper to state, " It is a legitimate source of pride to Philadelphia that one of its most cherished institutions has made this innovation.
Although Shelton's version is cherished by some, according to John Ormsby and Samuel Putnam, it was far from satisfactory as a carrying over of Cervantes's text.
Dedham pottery is a cherished class of antiques, characterized by a distinctive crackle glaze, blue-and-white color scheme, and a frequent motif of rabbits and other animals.
( K. 316 ) He furthermore opined that it is the determination of the spotless ( virtuous ) not to do evil, even in return, to those who have cherished enmity and done them evil.
Virtue, according to the utilitarian doctrine, is not naturally and originally part of the end, but it is capable of becoming so ; and in those who love it disinterestedly it has become so, and is desired and cherished, not as a means to happiness, but as a part of their happiness.
Ahab still consulted Yahweh's prophets and cherished Yahweh's protection when he named his sons Ahaziah (" Yahweh holds ") and Jehoram (" Yahweh is high.
In the language of the scholars who endorse this view, courtly love is cherished for its exaltation of femininity as an ennobling, spiritual, and moral force, in contrast to the ironclad chauvinism of the first and second estates.
The Committee produced its report in April 1993, and argued that " a republic is achievable without threatening Australia ’ s cherished democratic institutions.
Collingwood's 1958 premiership is much cherished by the club as it prevented Melbourne from equalling Collingwood's record four premierships in a row.
: And peace is cherished there :|
Considered rebels and bandits by the Swedish army, the Snapphanar were protected by the local population and their bravery is still cherished in the municipality.
Although the memory of the Gordians would have been cherished by the Senate and thus appear sympathetic in any Senatorial documentation of the period, the only account of Gordian's early career that has survived is contained within the Historia Augusta, and it cannot be taken as an accurate or reliable description of his life story prior to his elevation to the purple in 238.
He is recognized for performing many of his own stunts, but one of the most widely claimed and cherished examples of this — that he did the majority of the stunt driving for his character during the high-speed chase scene in Bullitt — was revealed not to be true by his most trusted stuntman and stunt driver Loren James.
Australia's abundant natural resources allow access to a large variety of quality meats, and to barbecue beef or lamb in the open air is considered a cherished national tradition.
The following year, 1990, she received an NAACP Image Award, which is given for " outstanding achievements and performances of people of color in the arts "; an award she cherished as it " was coming from my own people ".
For instance, Self-evaluation maintenance theory suggests that people feel dissonance when their cherished skills or traits are outmatched by close social ties ( e. g. Jill the painter feels dissonance because she is friends with a master painter-Jill can either care less about painting, or justify her inferiority in some other way ).
The ability to write good counterpoint was highly cherished by Baroque composers and Johann Sebastian Bach is regarded as the greatest composer of contrapuntal music.
In an article he wrote for Life magazine, Williams discussed why he chose her for the part :" Anna and I had both cherished the dream that her appearance in the part I created for her in The Fugitive Kind would be her greatest triumph to date ... he is simply a rare being who seems to have about her a little lightning-shot cloud all her own ....
Viesīte is typical Selonia town that cherished by its people, now is blossoming on the hills in the very middle of district.

cherished and inclined
Gregory took up at first the study of philosophy ; theology was afterwards added, but his mind remained always inclined to philosophical study, so much so indeed that in his youth he cherished strongly the hope of demonstrating that the Christian religion was the only true and good philosophy.

cherished and Street
His cherished Tiny Tim film project Street of Dreams is commemorated in the painting Film Script.

cherished and which
Conversely, if statistics were uncovered which contradicted a cherished theory, the sources were denounced as faulty.
Aegina obtained money for her defences by the unwilling sacrifice of her cherished relic, the head of St. George, which had been carried there from Livadia by the Catalans.
2 ), which had become predominant in the Hellenistic world, were cherished in the Sasanian court.
Then, in the early 1920s, in a lecture which he was invited to give at Lorentz's university in Leiden, Einstein sought to reconcile the theory of relativity with his mentor's cherished concept of the aether.
The core of its repertoire consists of the most cherished Polish and foreign dramas, with which directors conduct their individual dialogues, asking these classic pieces questions tormenting modern-day Poles.
In the front of the Sorbonne, below the lecture rooms of the faculty of letters, a tablet records an extract from his will, in which he bequeaths his noble and cherished library to the halls of his professorial work and triumphs.
None were more cherished than two awards which came early in his career.
He met both good and evil fortune with the same unclouded brow, the same unruffled temper, the same unshakable confidence in the justice and righteousness of his cause ... He has gone to his rest, and to-day in this House, of which he was the senior and the most honoured Member, we may call a truce in the strife of parties, while we remember together our common loss, and pay our united homage to a gracious and cherished memory —
Five years older than he, she cherished a love for him which was blended with a somewhat motherly anxiety.
The scientific method is to follow implicitly the discovered principles and rules of phonology, and not to swerve a foot's breadth from them unless plain, actual exceptions shall justify it ; to follow the genius of the language, and by cross-questioning to elicit its secrets ; to gauge each letter and estimate the value which attaches to it in each position ; and lastly to possess the true philosophic spirit which is prepared to welcome any new fact, though it may modify or upset the most cherished theory.
Although she admits to " telling a story ," the episode ends with T ' Pol privately producing an apparently cherished artifact of her great-grandmother: the purse into which T ' Mir had placed her cash upon emerging from the patent office.
The heterodox views which he maintained aroused the anger of the Church on behalf of its cherished Aristotelianism, and a short time after his death his books were placed on the Index.
The crowning moment of the march was Dr. King's famous " I Have a Dream " speech in which he articulated the hopes and aspirations of the Civil Rights Movement and rooted it in two cherished gospels — the Old Testament and the unfulfilled promise of the American creed.
His favorite study in exile was the History of the World, which Raleigh had written in prison, and he cherished a constant faith that the spirit of liberty in England would produce a new revolution.
It is the cherished ideal mood which the Gurus have preached and for which a Sikh daily prays in his Ardas ( Prayer ).
Lord Ashley now retired to the Netherlands, where he became acquainted with Georges-Louis Leclerc, Pierre Bayle, Benjamin Furly, the English Quaker merchant, at whose house Locke had resided during his stay at Rotterdam, and probably Limborch and the rest of the literary circle of which Locke had been a cherished and honoured member nine or ten years before.
The development of Old Norse into local dialects and the dissimilation of customs due to isolation added an ethnic flavor to the fylker, which is cherished today.
They asked CSU Channel Islands to consider making its mascot the dolphin, which is cherished by the tribe.
Yet his memory would be cherished by the Romanov dynasty which to a great extent owned the crown due to his prowess and skill.
" It has been a long cherished dream which is finally coming true ", said the actress about her music debut.

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