Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Bretwalda" ¶ 5
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

imaginary and depiction
A 19th century imaginary depiction of Gothic warriors from Charlotte Mary Yonge, Young Folks ' History of Rome, 1880
According to Higley, Barclay is a satirical depiction of Trekkies and their excessive obsession with imaginary characters.
Sir John Fortescue ( 1395-1485 ), Lord Chief Justice, with oversized great seal | great seal of England, showing Royal arms of England | royal arms, hanging from a cord draped against the left side of his chest ; imaginary depiction with anachronistic dress of 17th. c.
Yet his skills are legendary as regards the depiction of horses of all breeds seen in motion, and the masterpieces from his best period ( around 1650-1660 ) are of indisputably high quality, beautifully combining imaginary southern landscapes and a typically Dutch atmosphere.
Barlowe's Inferno details artist / author Wayne Barlowe's imaginary journey to a unique and vivid depiction of Hell.
His first exhibition consisted mostly of large-format acrylic paintings of imaginary seals and stamps ; he would retain the flatness and limited color range of these works, but would move into the depiction of bodies and cartoon characters, the latter of which led him to be grouped with Pop Art as the 1960s progressed.

imaginary and from
A person who participates in archery is typically known as an " archer " or " bowman ", and one who is fond of or an expert at archery can be referred to as a " toxophilite ".< ref > The noun " toxophilite ", meaning " a lover or devotee of archery, an archer ", is derived from Toxophilus by Roger Ascham —" imaginary proper name invented by Ascham, and hence title of his book ( 1545 ), intended to mean ' lover of the bow '.
where the integration limits indicate integration along a contour that can be chosen as follows: from −∞ to 0 along the negative real axis, from 0 to ± iπ along the imaginary axis, and from ± iπ to +∞± iπ along a contour parallel to the real axis.
Jorge Luis Borges wrote a contemporary bestiary of sorts, the Book of Imaginary Beings, which collects imaginary beasts from bestiaries and fiction.
* Yard line: An imaginary line one yard from the boundary.
Don Quixote has a run-in with traders from Toledo, who " insult " the imaginary Dulcinea, one of whom severely beats Don Quixote and leaves him on the side of the road.
The phrase " tilting at windmills " to describe an act of attacking imaginary enemies derives from an iconic scene in the book.
In electromagnetic radiation ( such as microwaves from an antenna, shown here ) the term applies only to the parts of the electromagnetic field that radiate into infinite space and decrease in intensity by an inverse-square law of power, so that the total radiation energy that crosses through an imaginary spherical surface is the same, no matter how far away from the antenna the spherical surface is drawn.
The imaginary company had produced a proof of the Riemann Hypothesis but then had great difficulties collecting royalties from mathematicians who had proved results assuming the Riemann Hypothesis.
Yard with Lunatics is a horrifying and imaginary vision of loneliness, fear and social alienation, a departure from the rather more superficial treatment of mental illness in the works of earlier artists such as Hogarth.
The important fact is that at very high velocities the behavior of the particle-like modes becomes distinct from the relativistic one-they can reach the speed of light limit at finite energy ; also the faster-than-light propagation is possible without requiring moving objects to have imaginary mass.
If is a quaternion valued spinor, is quaternion hermitian 4x4 matrix coming from Sp ( 8 ) and is a pure imaginary quaternion ( both of which are 4-vector bosons ) then the interaction term is:
Nevertheless, the line in the old observatory's courtyard today differs no more than a few metres from that imaginary line which is now the Prime Meridian of the world.
In Lacan's analysis, Hamlet unconsciously assumes the role of phallus — the cause of his inaction — and is increasingly distanced from reality " by mourning, fantasy, narcissism and psychosis ", which create holes ( or lack ( manque )) in the real, imaginary, and symbolic aspects of his psyche.
As with all improv offers, improvisers are encouraged to respect the validity and continuity of the imaginary environment defined by themselves and their fellow performers ; this means, for example, taking care not to walk through the table or " miraculously " survive multiple bullet wounds from another improviser's gun.
ISO 3166 never assigns country codes beginning with " X ", these codes being assigned for privately customized use only ( reserved, never for official codes )— for instance, the ISO 3166-based NATO country codes ( STANAG 1059, 9th edition ) use " X " codes for imaginary exercise countries ranging from XXB for " Brownland " to XXR for " Redland ", as well as for major commands such as XXE for SHAPE or XXS for SACLANT.
Bemoaning the murders of Duncan, Lady Macduff, and Banquo, she tries to wash off imaginary bloodstains from her hands, all the while speaking of the terrible things she knows she pressed her husband to do.
Micronations are also distinguished from imaginary countries and from other kinds of social groups ( such as eco-villages, campuses, tribes, clans, sects, and residential community associations ) by expressing a formal and persistent, even if unrecognized, claim of sovereignty over some physical territory.
Nevertheless, the country may conveniently be visualized in general terms as divided in three by an imaginary line drawn eastward from the Khyber Pass and another drawn southwest from Islamabad down the middle of the country.
A more accurate description of this phase of the vault may be " the spin " because the vaulter spins around an imaginary axis from head to toe.

imaginary and John
Landscape architect Noakes enters, shortly accompanied by Captain Brice and Lady Croom, who then proceed to discuss the proposed modifications to the gardens, with Thomasina drawing a picture of an imaginary hermit ( in the biblical style of John the Baptist ) onto Mr. Noakes's picture of the garden ( with its fantasy hermitage ) as he sees it in the future.
* Donna Tartt's novel The Secret History has the character Bunny erroneously closely linking Walton and John Donne in his imaginary belief in " metahemeralism ".
Chapman developed a series of obsessions, including artwork, The Catcher in the Rye, music, and John Lennon, and started talking with the imaginary ' little people ' again.
Siegel was invited in 1986 by DC Comics ' editor Julius Schwartz to write an " imaginary " final story for Superman, following Marv Wolfman's Crisis on Infinite Earths limited series and before John Byrne's The Man of Steel miniseries, which reintroduced Superman.
Between 1810 and 1824 he persistently controverted the reality of Ireland's Astronomer Royal John Brinkley's imaginary star-parallaxes.
John Ruskin prefaced his contrast of the Mediterranean with the Northern ( Gothic ) landscape, architecture, and character in " The Nature of Gothic " with an imaginary stratospheric flight, seeing:
John R. Searle considered the ontology of the social imaginary to be complex, but that in practice ' the complex structure of social reality is, so to speak, weightless and invisible.
) John talked about the imaginary country, which would live up to the ideals of his song " Imagine ", saying this in the " official " declaration:
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, he collaborated with novelist John Hearne, under the pseudonym ' John Morris ', on a series of three thrillers -- Fever Grass, The Candywine Development, and The Checkerboard Caper -- about an imaginary Jamaican secret service.
His " imaginary friend " John Wayne reappears since Custer became a minister, and for the first time gives Jesse information he could not have known on his own.

imaginary and Saxon
The Encyclopaedia dismissed derivations from Saint Begga and from an imaginary old Saxon word beggen, " to beg " or " to pray ".

depiction and from
The novel Tyrannosaur Canyon by Douglas Preston opens with a depiction of the Apollo 17 moonwalks using quotes taken from the official mission transcript.
The covered ark with golden staves carried by the priesthood ( Ancient Israel ) | priests, and seven priests with rams ' horns, at the siege of Jericho, in an eighteenth-century artist's depiction. The biblical account relates that during the Israelites ' exodus from Egypt, the Ark was carried by the priests some 2, 000 cubits in advance of the people and their army, or host.
Imaginary depiction of Ælle from John Speed's 1611 " Saxon Heptarchy ".
Albrecht Altdorfer's depiction of the moment in 333 BC when Alexander the Great routed Darius III for supremacy in Asia Minor is vast in ambition, sweeping in scope, vivid in imagery, rich in symbols, and obviously heroic — the Iliad of painting, as literary critic Friedrich Schlegel suggested In the painting, a swarming cast of thousands of soldiers surround the central action: Alexander on his white steed, leading two rows of charging cavalrymen, dashes after a fleeing Darius, who looks anxiously over his shoulder from a chariot.
The Madaba Map depiction of 6th-century Jerusalem has the Cardo Maximus, the town ’ s main street, beginning at the northern gate, today's Gates in Jerusalem's Old City Walls | Damascus Gate, and traversing the city in a straight line from north to south to Nea Church.
Strictly speaking, it refers to art unconcerned with the literal depiction of things from the visible world — it can, however, refer to an object or image which has been distilled from the real world, or indeed, another work of art.
Some of the laws and customs of mourning in Judaism are derived from the Book of Job's depiction of Job's mourning and the behavior of his companions.
The earliest known depiction of a gun is a sculpture from a cave in Sichuan, dating to the 12th century that portrays a figure carrying a vase-shaped bombard, firing flames and a ball.
It is not until the 13th-century French prose romances, including the Lancelot-Grail and the Post-Vulgate Cycle, that Camelot began to supersede Caerleon, and even then, many descriptive details applied to Camelot derive from Geoffrey's earlier grand depiction of the Welsh town.
* Deposition from the Cross, the depiction of the removal of Jesus from the cross
His depiction of Elbonia has also drawn criticism from a variety of corners.
* In 2008, Trudeau received the Mental Health Research Advocacy Award from the Yale School of Medicine for his depiction of the mental-health issues facing soldiers upon returning home from the Afghanistan and Iraq wars.
As people from the English countryside immigrated to America, they brought elements of English folklore with them, and this particular depiction of elves then evolved in America into the Christmas elves of pop culture.
His ’ depiction of embryological development strongly differs from Haeckel ’ s depiction, for His argues that the phylogenetic explanation of ontogenetic events is unnecessary.
There is a depiction of a hockey-like game from 200 BC in Ancient Greece when the game may have been called " Κερητίζειν " (" kerētízein ") because it was played with a horn (" κέρας " in Greek ) and a ball-like object.
During the more radical phase of the Revolution from 1793 to 1794, the usage and depiction of Hercules changed.
This painting combines a portrait-like depiction of Bazille's cousin, Thérèse des Hours, who is seen from behind — and the sunlit landscape at which she gazes.
The earliest depiction of a firearm is a sculpture from a cave in Sichuan, China.
His depiction of how members of the council were elected to the senate, for example, aimed to emphasise the way the electoral system prevented factionalism from occurring, instead making sure that “ public benefits are largely extended among the citizens ” rather than narrowly amongst “ one family ”.
Heraldic depiction of the King of Scots from a 15thC French armorial.

1.210 seconds.