Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "McCabe & Mrs. Miller" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Englishwoman and town
The story of a young Englishwoman, told by her elderly solicitor and trustee, about her time as a prisoner in Malaya during World War II and her new post-war life in Australia, in a small outback community which she sets out to turn into ' a town like Alice ' i. e. Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia.
Harry, a small town border sheriff, lives at the site of a defunct silver mine with his girlfriend Cherry, an Englishwoman who works as a nurse.

Englishwoman and she
In most essentials Margaret remained an Englishwoman in attitude and outlook, and at root she genuinely desired a better understanding between the land of her birth and her adopted home.
By 1944 not all of Time and Lifes forty war correspondents were men ; six were newswomen: Mary Welsh Hemingway, Margaret Bourke-White, Lael Tucker, Peggy Durdin, Shelley Smith Mydans, Annalee Jacoby, and Jacqueline Saix, an Englishwoman whose name is usually omitted ( she and Welsh are the only women listed in Time's publisher's letter, May 8, 1944, as being part of the magazine's team ) reported on the war for the company.
Sophia, a granddaughter of James I of England, was not considered to be an Englishwoman as she had not been born in England.
She plays Ellen, a professor of French literature and single Englishwoman, who holidays in 1970s Haiti to get the sexual attention she does not get at home.
While working as a legal secretary she continued to write and although her appearance and manners would have allowed her to easily pass as an Englishwoman, she asserted her Chinese heritage and wrote articles that told what life was like for a Chinese woman in white America.
On Ibiza, he met an Englishwoman, Claire Lydon, and they married in 1958, moving to California, where she was tragically killed at Big Sur, while shopping, in an automobile accident.
Annis continued to be a leading television actress throughout the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, appearing in series such as Edward the Seventh ( 1975 ) as Lillie Langtry, a role she reprised in Lillie ( 1978 ); Madame Bovary ( 1975 ); and Parnell and the Englishwoman ( 1991 ), in which she played Kitty O ' Shea ; as well as the miniseries Reckless ( 1998 ) and its 2000 sequel.
In the film, Marbles appears as a hearty, tweed-clad Englishwoman with a frail, seemingly senile companion — her ancient " nurse " Miss Withers ( Estelle Winwood )— for whom she is now caring.
Episodic in character, it covers a period of 20 years in the life of the first person narrator, an attractive nameless Englishwoman in search of perfect happiness, a state she equates with life with a perfect partner.
In the 1957-58 television season, she appeared in the CBS sitcom filmed in England, Dick and the Duchess, in the role of Jane Starrett, a patrician Englishwoman married to an American insurance claims investigator living in London, a role played by Patrick O ' Neal.

Englishwoman and can
This can cause confusion if the woman being greeted is used to a more distant and formal handshake as the first greeting, such as an Englishwoman would be.

Englishwoman and managing
Bruce was born in Singapore, the daughter of an Englishwoman and a Scotsman who worked his way up from post boy to become managing director of a division of Unilever.

Englishwoman and .
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, LSA, MD ( 9 June 1836 – 17 December 1917 ), was an English physician and feminist, the first Englishwoman to qualify as a physician and surgeon in Britain, the co-founder of the first hospital staffed by women, the first dean of a British medical school, the first woman M. D.
It may have been in The Englishwoman ’ s Journal, first issued in 1858, that Elizabeth first read of Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, who had become the first female doctor in the United States in 1849.
His grandmother, an Englishwoman deserted by her husband, had come to the United States with her son, remarried, and moved to Puerto Rico.
* dozens of articles for periodicals including The Englishwoman, Woman's Leader, Fraser's Magazine, National Review, Macmillan's Magazine, Common Cause, Fortnightly Review, Nineteenth Century and Contemporary Review.
The marriage caused some controversy, mainly because of Joan's chequered marital history and the fact that marriage to an Englishwoman wasted an opportunity to form an alliance with a foreign power.
He married an Englishwoman, Constantia Draper, and the couple had four children.
Forster connects personal relationships with the politics of colonialism through the story of the Englishwoman Adela Quested, the Indian Dr. Aziz, and the question of what did or did not happen between them in the Marabar Caves.
The biggest critic of the camps was the Englishwoman, humanitarian, and welfare worker Emily Hobhouse.
On the one hand, the novel is the fictional biography of Martha Cochrane, a clever and ambitious Englishwoman with a rural lower middle-class background who, after graduating from university, attempts to climb the ladder of success within corporate Britain.
An Englishwoman named Opal ( Geraldine Chaplin ) who claims to be working on a documentary for the BBC appears in the studio but is told to leave by Haven.
Deciding to emigrate, the couple and their children moved to Australia's New South Wales in 1878, but it was here that Mary died after a few years, and so in 1886 Stephen remarried, this time to Harriet Eliza Gordon ( 1853 – 1910 ), an Englishwoman from a wealthy background who had moved to Australia when still a child.
The longest known legal will is that of Englishwoman Frederica Evelyn Stilwell Cook.
During his stay in Rouen, Brunel had met Sophia Kingdom, a young Englishwoman who was an orphan and was working as a governess.
He sees a strange Englishwoman there, and angrily yells at her not to profane this sacred place.
Then Aziz looks down the hill and sees Adela speaking to another young Englishwoman, Miss Derek, who has arrived with Fielding in a car.
; Miss Derek: An Englishwoman employed by a Hindu royal family.
Rassam married an Englishwoman, Anne Eliza Price, and became the father of 7 children.
Although he had done as much as anyone to found the orchestra, had lived in Britain for 30 years and was married to an Englishwoman, Bosdorf was regarded by some colleagues as an enemy alien and was forced out of the orchestra.
He was the fourth of five children of John Michaelis Barnardo, a furrier, and his second wife, Abigail, an Englishwoman and member of the Plymouth Brethren.
Ranulf's mistress was an Englishwoman named Alveva or Ælfgifu, who was the mother of at least two of his sons.

Constance and Miller
* Allison Janney as Constance Miller
Prisoners included suffragettes such as Anne Miller Fraser, Constance Markeivicz, Charlotte Despard, Mary Richardson, and Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington.

Constance and professional
* May 17 – Constance Menard, French professional dressage rider
* Constance Menard ( born 1968 ), French professional Dressage rider and equestrienne
She made her professional debut in Brendan Behan's play The Hostage before making her television debut in the BBC series Sophia and Constance.

Constance and ,"
The studio's original choice to play " Irene ," the part eventually played by Carole Lombard, was Constance Bennett, and Miriam Hopkins was also considered, but the director, Gregory LaCava, would only agree to Bennett if Universal borrowed William Powell from MGM.
Historian Constance Myers notes that while " initial prognoses for the union of Trotskyists and Socialists were favorable ," it was only later when " constant and protracted contact caused differences to surface.
* Constance Lathrop, " Grog ," U. S. Naval Institute Proceedings, Mar 1935, pp. 377 – 380 ; letter, Robert Smith to Keith Spence, 11 November 1808, RG 45 ( M209, Vol.
During a stint living in Hollywood in 1936 and 1937, Kilgallen wrote a daily column that could only be read in New York that nonetheless provoked a libel suit from Constance Bennett, " who in the early thirties had been the highest paid performer in motion pictures ," according to a Kilgallen biography, " but who was 1937 experiencing a temporary decline in popular appeal.
* In Lawrence Durrell's 1982 novel ," Constance ", part of his Avignon Quintet, there is reference to a painter called Clement who paints an old smoky masterpiece, a sort of Paradise Regained painting, called " Cockayne ".
* Cappel, Constance, " A Stairwell in Lodz ," Xlibris, 2003. ISBN 1-4134-3717-6
Doing away with previous autonomous institutes, the new university at Constance was set up with a cooperative and cross-disciplinary structure of " Units of Teaching and Research ," following the Humbold principle of developing teaching out of research.

0.629 seconds.