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Eriador and .
* Harfoots: The Harfoots were the most numerous group of Hobbits and also the first to enter Eriador.
* Fallohides: The Fallohides were the least numerous group and the second group to enter Eriador.
* Stoors: The Stoors were the second most numerous group of Hobbits and the last to enter Eriador.
They had lived in the great woods that covered most of Eriador, and when the Númenóreans started to chop these woods down to build their ships in the Second Age, the Dúnedain of Númenor earned the hostility of the Dunlendings.
In J. R. R. Tolkien's fantasy world of Middle-earth, the Misty Mountains ( also known by its Sindarin name of Hithaeglir — misspelled as Hithaiglin on the original Lord of the Rings map — and as the Mountains of Mist ) is a mountain range, running for 795 miles ( 1280 kilometres ) from north to south, between Eriador and the valley of the Great River, Anduin, and from Mount Gundabad in the far north to Methedras in the south.
These lesser houses held no realms, however: all the Noldorin realms of Beleriand and later Eriador were ruled by a descendant of Finwë.
Of those who did pass through Eriador and over the Ered Luin, many would tarry behind in the east of Beleriand searching for their lost king Elwë ( later known as Elu Thingol ), and the first two clans were ferried across to Valinor on a huge island.
Aragorn granted them Fangorn Forest as an enclave and gave them permission to expand the forest again west into the vast wastes of Eriador where once a vast primeval forest had spread, but Treebeard lamented that while the forests may spread again the Ents would not, as the entwives had not been found up to date.
When the Númenóreans began to establish trading ports ( later colonies ) on the western shores of Middle-earth, Adûnaic mingled with the languages of various groups of Edain who had not travelled to Númenor, and the resulting trade language quickly spread throughout Eriador and its neighbours, laying the foundation for the later Common Speech.
Bree was a very ancient settlement of men in Eriador, long established by the time of the Third Age of Middle-earth.
One was that Bree had been founded and populated by men of the Edain who did not reach Beleriand in the first age, remaining east of the mountains in Eriador.
Bree was the chief village of Bree-land, a small wooded region near the intersection of the main north-south and east-west routes through Eriador.
Fangorn forest was, in actuality, just the easternmost remnant of the immense forest that spanned all of Eriador and Calenardhon in the First Age and early Second Age.
Arnor, or the Northern Kingdom, was a kingdom of the Dúnedain in the land of Eriador in Middle-earth.
At its greatest, Arnor encompassed almost the whole region of Eriador between Bruinen, Gwathló and Lhûn, and the region which would later be known as the Shire.
The long wars and a series of natural disasters had taken their toll on the population of Eriador, and the Dúnedain especially were few in number and unable to maintain a kingdom.
When the kingdom of Angmar arose in northern Eriador, Cardolan became the most important ally of Arthedain.
It was called the Angle, and it is here that the first Stoor Hobbits came into Eriador around T. A.
1636 devastated Eriador.
Fornost Erain ( Sindarin ' Northern-fortress of the Kings ' from for ( n ) ( north ) + ost ( fortress ); " Norbury of the Kings " in Westron ) was a city of Eriador in the north of Middle-earth.
Eriador is a large region in J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional world of Middle-earth.

Eriador and J
In the fiction of J. R. R. Tolkien, Eregion or Hollin was a kingdom of the Noldorin Elves in Eriador during the Second Age, located near the West Gate of Moria under the shadow of the Hithaeglir ( Misty Mountains ).
In the works of J. R. R. Tolkien, Weathertop ( Sindarin Amon Sûl, " Hill of Wind ") is a hill in the Eriador region of Middle-earth, the southernmost and highest summit of the Weather Hills.

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Among many roles in his career, Arau has played " Captain Herrera ", a lieutenant of Federal general " Mapache ", in Sam Peckinpah's 1969 western, The Wild Bunch, chief bandit " El Guapo " in Three Amigos ( USA, 1986 ), a comedy with Martin Short, Steve Martin, and Chevy Chase, and the smuggler " Juan " in Romancing the Stone which starred Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner.
Trying to escape Boniface's " protection ", Alexios III attempted to seek shelter with Michael I Komnenos Doukas, the ruler of Epirus, in 1205.
* Powell, Michael, " Boston's Big Dig Awash in Troubles ", Washington Post, 2004-11-19, Retrieved on August 9, 2006.
* Hans Michael Eßlinger, " Handbook of Brewing: Processes, Technology, Markets ", Wiley-VCH, 2009, ISBN 3-527-31674-4
Michael Parenti, in his 1996 essay which examines the role of progressive media in the use of the term, " The JFK Assassination II: Conspiracy Phobia On The Left ", states,
* Rhodes, Michael R. ( 2000 ), " The Nature of Coercion ", Journal of Value Inquiry, 34 ( 2 / 3 )
* Johns, Michael " The Lessons of Afghanistan: Bipartisan Support for Freedom Fighters Pays Off ", Policy Review, Spring 1987.
*" The Contras ' Valley Forge: How I View the Nicaragua Crisis ", by Enrique Bermúdez ( with Michael Johns ), Policy Review magazine, Summer 1988.
Michael Mehaffy wrote an introductory essay on Christopher Alexander's built work in the online publication " Katarxis 3 ", which includes a gallery of Alexander's major built projects to date ( September 2004 ).
The Jacksons ( previously The Jackson 5 ) did many disco songs from 1975 to 1980, including " Shake Your Body ( Down to the Ground )" ( 1978 ), " Blame it on the Boogie " ( 1978 ), and " Can You Feel It " ( 1980 )— all sung by Michael Jackson, whose 1979 solo album, Off the Wall, included several disco hits, including the album's title song, " Rock with You ", " Workin ' Day and Night ", and his second chart-topping solo hit in the disco genre, " Don't Stop ' til You Get Enough ".
*" The Grave ", a song that McLean had written about the Vietnam War, was covered by George Michael in 2003 in protest against the Iraq War.
* Supplements: Audio commentary by producer Paul M. Heller and screenwriter Michael Allin, " Blood and Steel: Making of Enter the Dragon ", " Bruce Lee: In His Own Words ", Linda Lee Cadwell interview gallery, " original " 1973 making-of featurette, " Backyard Workout with Bruce Lee "
* Supplements: Disc 1: Audio commentary by producer Paul M. Heller and screenwriter Michael Allin, " Blood and Steel: Making of Enter the Dragon ", " Bruce Lee: In His Own Words ", Linda Lee Cadwell interview gallery, " Location: Hong Kong with Enter the Dragon " original 1973 documentary, " Backyard Workout With Bruce Lee " Disc 2: " Curse of the Dragon " feature-length documentary, " Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey " feature-length documentary, theatrical trailers, TV spots
* Supplements: Audio commentary by producer Paul M. Heller and screenwriter Michael Allin, Isolated music score, an all-new introduction and interview with Linda Lee Cadwell, " Location: Hong Kong with Enter the Dragon " original 1973 documentary, " Backyard Workout with Bruce ", " Bruce Lee In His Own Words ", theatrical trailers, TV spots, cast and crew biographies, " Significance of Belts in Martial Arts " notes, " Heir to the Throne " – Jackie Chan notes, retrospective of Hong Kong martial arts films notes and stills, behind-the-scenes notes, reel recommendations – 16 movies
* Supplements: Audio commentary by producer Paul M. Heller and screenwriter Michael Allin, isolated music score, an all-new introduction and interview with Linda Lee Cadwell, " Location: Hong Kong with Enter the Dragon " original 1973 documentary, " Backyard Workout with Bruce ", " Bruce Lee: In His Own Words ", theatrical trailers, TV spots, cast and crew biographies, 10 exclusive Enter the Dragon postcards, 8 reproductions of original lobby cards, reproduction of the original press brochure
* Supplements: Audio commentary by producer Paul M. Heller and screenwriter Michael Allin, " Blood and Steel: Making of Enter the Dragon ", " Bruce Lee: In His Own Words ", Linda Lee Cadwell interview gallery, " Location: Hong Kong with Enter the Dragon " original 1973 documentary, " Backyard Workout with Bruce Lee ", " Curse of the Dragon " feature-length documentary, " Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey " feature-length documentary, theatrical trailers, TV spots
Take one away, it doesn't work ", referring to the movie's portrayal of two parallel storylines ; one of a young Vito Corleone and the other of his son Michael.

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This was developed into the language " E-Prime " by D. David Bourland, Jr. 15 years after his death ( E-Prime a form of the English language in which the verb " to be " does not appear in any of its forms ; for example, the sentence " the movie was good " could translate into E-Prime as " I liked the movie ", thereby distinguishing opinion from fact ).
David D. Friedman says he is not an absolutist rights theorist but is also " not a utilitarian ", however, he does believe that " utilitarian arguments are usually the best way to defend libertarian views ".
According to D. C. Congressional Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, Hill's treatment by the panel also contributed to the large number of women elected to Congress in 1992, " women clearly went to the polls with the notion in mind that you had to have more women in Congress ", she said.
Administrative law in the United States often involves the regulatory activities of so-called " independent agencies ", such as the Federal Trade Commission (" FTC "), whose Washington D. C. headquarters are shown above.
* D. W. Olson et al., " The Moon and the Marathon ", Sky & Telescope Sep. 2004
Jerome's first revision of the Itala ( A. D. 383 ), known as the Roman, is still used at St Peter's in Rome, but the " Gallican ", thanks especially to St Gregory of Tours, who introduced it into Gaul in the 6th century, has ousted it everywhere else.
( 2011 ) " Bayesian Epistemology ", in: Bernecker, S. and Pritchard, D.
For example " GOOD DOG " can be encrypted as " PLLX XLP " where " L " substitutes for " O ", " P " for " G ", and " X " for " D " in the message.
The 21 consonant letters in the English alphabet are B, C, D, F, G, H, J, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, V, X, Z, and usually W and Y: The letter Y stands for the consonant in " yoke ", the vowel in " myth " and the vowel in " funny ", and " yummy " for both consonant and vowel, for examples ; W almost always represents a consonant except in rare words ( mostly loanwords from Welsh ) like " crwth " " cwm ".
Lesser taboo terms include " pony and trap " for " crap " ( as in defecate, but often used to denote nonsense or low quality ); to blow a raspberry ( rude sound of derision ) from raspberry tart for " fart "; " D ' Oyly Carte " for " fart "; " Jimmy Riddle " for " piddle " ( as in urinate ), " J. Arthur Rank " ( a film mogul ), or " ham shank " for " wank ", " Bristol Cities " ( contracted to ' Bristols ') for " titties ", etc.
* H. B. G. Casimir, and D. Polder, " The Influence of Retardation on the London-van der Waals Forces ", Phys.
* J. D. Barrow, " Much ado about nothing ", ( 2005 ) Lecture at Gresham College.
""), with an anti-war, anti-violence (" Rambozo The Clown ") bent, moving away from the violent imagery of their early records, while remaining as subversive as ever (" I Spy ", " D. M. S. O .").
The Dead Kennedys performed what appears to be their first new song in 24 years, " You're Such a Fake ", during their October 16, 2010, concert at the Rock and Roll Hotel in Washington, D. C.
* 1941 – United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt declares December 7 to be " a date which will live in infamy ", after which the U. S. and the Republic of China declare war against Japan.
* J. D. Verhoeven, " A review of microsegregation induced banding phenomena in steels ", J.
* Jeffrey Wadsworth and Oleg D. Sherby, " Damascus Steels ", Scientific American, pp. 94 – 99, February 1985.
* Jones, D. 1909 ), " The Pronunciation of English ", Cambridge: CUP ; rpt in facsimile in Jones ( 2002 ).
* Jones, D .( 1918 ), " An Outline of English Phonetics ", Leipzig: Teubner ; rpt in Jones ( 2002 ).
* Jones, D. and Kwing Tong Woo ( 1912 ), " A Cantonese Phonetic Reader ", London: University of London Press ; rpt in Jones ( 2002 ).
* Jones, D. and H. Michaelis ( 1913 ), " A Phonetic Dictionary of the English Language ", Hanover-Berlin: Carl Meyer and Gustav Prior ; rpt in Jones ( 2002 ).
* Jones, D. and S. Plaatje ( 1916 ), " A Sechuana Reader ", London: ULP ; rpt in Jones ( 2002 ).

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