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Contemporaries and frequently
Contemporaries nicknamed him Orpheus of Amsterdam and even the city authorities frequently brought important visitors to hear Sweelinck's improvisations.

Contemporaries and referred
Contemporaries referred to him ( often ironically ) as ' the Wonderman '.

Contemporaries and them
Contemporaries variously attributed them to Slingsby Bethel, John Phillips ( Milton's nephew ), Thomas Percival, and John Toland.
Contemporaries such as William Bradford and Edward Winslow called the Massasoit the greatest king amongst them, observing that ;

Contemporaries and ("
His dissertation, " The Appearance of Science Fiction as a Genre of Artistic Prose " (" Nastanak naučne fantastike kao žanra umetničke proze "), appeared in his Contemporaries of the Future anthology, along with several of the stories discussed.

Contemporaries and ",
* Keolker, James, " Last Acts, The Operas of Puccini and His Italian Contemporaries ", 2001.
": Queen Margaret Thatcherized in Recent Productions of 3 Henry VI ", in Edward J. Esche ( editor ), Shakespeare and his Contemporaries in Performance ( London: Ashgate, 2000 )
*" Philosophical Predecessors and Contemporaries of Ibn Bâjjah ", in The Islamic Quarterly, 1955

Contemporaries and from
Contemporaries expected that Austrian-Hungary would wrench itself from the Habsburg yoke upon his death.
* Painted In Peel: The Peel Landscape by the Group of Seven and Their Contemporaries, featuring works from the permanent collection, and those of the McMichael Canadian Art Collection, the Art Gallery of Ontario ( 2004 )
Contemporaries from the alternative comedy scene who also appeared included Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie, Helen Lederer, Gareth Hale, Norman Pace, Arthur Smith ( the first milkman to be murdered ), Mel Smith playing the fictional head of light entertainment at the BBC ' Jumbo Whiffy ', Chris Barrie, Lee Cornes, Andy de la Tour, John Bird and Harry Enfield.
Contemporaries believed that he had fled from his creditors, who took out a legal " docket " against him, identifying him as a wine-merchant.
Contemporaries did comment adversely upon this, especially upon the death of Reeve from all-too-natural causes followed by his equally mundane funeral at the New Bethlehem Burial grounds.
* The annual Bloomberg New Contemporaries Exhibition showcases new work by graduates from Fine Art schools in the UK.
Contemporaries said that Ardoin suffered from impaired mental and musical capacities later in his life, probably from that infamous night.
Contemporaries acknowledged his learning ; and from 1769 to 1771 he was Boyle Lecturer.

Contemporaries and for
Contemporaries praised him for disdaining material wealth, sharing what he had with his friends, and refusing bribes.
Contemporaries found great irony in the fact that the iconoclast Radcliffe, who scorned book-learning, should bequeath a substantial sum for the founding of the Radcliffe Library.
Contemporaries report of his seemingly inhuman tolerance for pain and his utter lack of emotion.
George Grenville, their Friends and Contemporaries, were published at London in 1852, and afford the chief authority for his life.
Contemporaries praise the noble and magnanimous character of Manfred, who was renowned for his physical beauty and intellectual attainments.
Contemporaries and historians have criticized Howe for both his gambling and the amount of time he supposedly spent with Mrs. Loring, with some going so far as to level accusations that this behaviour interfered with his military activities ; historian John Alden does not give these ideas credence.
In 1945, Sturla Gudlaugsson, a specialist in Dutch seventeenth-century painting and iconography and Director of the Netherlands Institute for Art History and the Mauritshuis in The Hague, wrote The Comedians in the work of Jan Steen and his Contemporaries, which revealed that a major influence on Jan Steen's work was the guild of the Rhetoricians or Rederijkers and their theatrical endeavors.
Contemporaries writing to The Times to add to his 1933 obituary called attention to his extraordinary physical prowess and natural aptitude for rowing, traits accompanied by mildness, good manners, and natural kindness.
Contemporaries recalled that Washington had an affinity for fist fighting.
A near-complete transcript, Brief Lives chiefly of Contemporaries set down John Aubrey between the Years 1669 and 1696, was edited for the Clarendon Press in 1898 by the Rev.
He wrote a life of Edwin Forrest in the American Actors Series ( Boston, 1881 ), and an admirable sketch of Edwin Booth for Edwin Booth and his Contemporaries ( Boston, 1886 ).
Contemporaries praised Blair for such personal strengths as gentleness and benevolence, and for his ability to penetrate immediately to the heart of a legal question.
Contemporaries described it as wealthy, well-peopled and well-fortified, but this affluence came to an end due to its support for Pescennius Niger ( r. 193 – 194 ) in his war against Septimius Severus ( r. 193 – 211 ).
When he graduated in 1964 his work was selected for that year's Young Contemporaries Exhibition in London and in the following year the AIA Galleries in London exhibited his first one-man show.
Contemporaries have reproduced the nitroglycerin pills brought by the AWB, and Lee hopes, with their help, to live to see the effects of his plan for emancipation.
Contemporaries also praised his achievement in carrying the Irish Land Act 1909, which allowed for compulsory purchase of large areas of land for the relief of congestion, through a hostile House of Lords.
Boty continued to paint on her own in her student flat in west London and in 1959 she had three more works selected for the Young Contemporaries exhibition.
* Young Contemporaries exhibition, initiated by Carel Weight for the British Society of Artists Galleries, establishes the New Contemporaries series.

frequently and referred
In Ancient Greece, " hubris " referred to actions which, intentionally or not, shamed and humiliated the victim, and frequently the perpetrator as well.
The founders or senior leaders of a British New Church Movement group will frequently be referred to as the apostles.
" () or " A. B. C's " () is one of the best-known English language alphabet songs, and perhaps the one most frequently referred to as " the alphabet song ", especially in the United States.
The outback can be also referred to as " back of beyond ", " back o ' Bourke " although these terms are more frequently used when referring to something a long way from anywhere, or a long way away.
His folksy manner led him to be nicknamed " Bubba ", especially in the Southern U. S. Since 2000, he has frequently been referred to as " The Big Dog " or " Big Dog.
A prominent critic was George Orwell, who frequently referred to him in his essays and diaries as " A Catholic Apologist " and accused him of being " silly-clever ", in line with his criticisms of G. K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, Ronald Knox and Wyndham-Lewis.
Fitz Gerald referred to the " big apple " frequently thereafter.
To emphasize the binary nature of this problem, it is frequently referred to as Boolean or propositional satisfiability.
For this reason, such stop consonants are frequently referred to in the local linguistic literature as ' depressor ' stops.
In the Gospel of John, Jesus referred to himself as the Son of God far more frequently than in the Synoptic Gospels.
At the federal level, it forms a common ' CDU / CSU ' faction in the Bundestag with the CDU, which is frequently referred to as the Union Faction ( die Unionsfraktion ).
In Swedish frequently also referred to as Chalmers rymdgrupp ( roughly Chalmers Space Group ).
Although frequently referred to onscreen as a cyborg, The Terminator might be more properly an android.
Combinations of antiretroviral drugs used as AIDS therapy are frequently referred to " drug cocktails " or " AIDS cocktails.
It is also frequently referred to as the Democratic Front, or al-Jabha al-Dimuqratiyah ( الجبهة الديموقراطية ).
" Popular videogame director Hideo Kojima has referred to the movie frequently as an influence on his work, in particular the Metal Gear series.
It has frequently been referred to in many different media, including songs and television programmes.
Along with J. Robert Oppenheimer, he is frequently referred to as " the father of the atomic bomb ".
The term was generally used for ships too small to stand in the line of battle, although early line-of-battle ships were frequently referred to as frigates when they were built for speed.
This principle is itself frequently referred to as Godwin's law.
It is frequently referred to as " knoxing ," a reference to Knox brand gelatin.
Public light buses ( 小巴 ) ( widely referred to as minibuses, or sometimes maxicabs, a de facto share taxi ) run the length and breadth of Hong Kong, through areas which the standard bus lines can not or do not reach as frequently, quickly or directly.
An extension of this trend was the emergence of a type of horror with emphasis on depictions of torture, suffering and violent deaths, ( variously referred to as " horror porn ", " torture porn ", Splatterporn, and even " gore-nography ") with films such as The Collector, The Tortured, Saw, and Hostel, and their respective sequels, frequently singled out as examples of emergence of this sub-genre.
Hildegard frequently referred to herself as an unlearned woman, completely incapable of Biblical exegesis.

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