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English and Reader
* Brycchan Carey, Reader in English Literature
Within its humanities division, the Faculty currently holds five National Teacher Fellows ; the latest being Dr Deborah Cartmell, Reader in English, who was made a Fellow in recognition of excellence in teaching and learning support.
Colin Reader, an English geologist who independently conducted a more recent survey of the enclosure, points out that the various quarries on the site have been excavated around the Causeway.
* ( 1930 ) English Literature Reader ( Two Volumes ) ( Shanghai: Kaiming )
* The English Reader: What Every Literate Person Needs to Know ( 2006 ) ISBN 0-19-507729-6
Ussher provides a slightly different time in his " Epistle to the Reader " in his Latin and English works: " I deduce that the time from the creation until midnight, January 1, 1 AD was 4003 years, seventy days and six hours.
* Richard Reader Harris ( KC ) ( 1847 – 1909 ), English barrister, counselor to Queen Victoria, Methodist minister
In 1973, became Reader in English and American Literature and a special Chair was created for him as professor in 1982.
As of October 2005, he has retired from his posts teaching English Literature as a Lecturer and University Reader in English Poetry for the University of Cambridge and as Director of Studies in English for Gonville and Caius College ; he retired as Librarian of the College at the end of September 2006.
A substantially expanded version of A World of Words was published in 1611 as Queen Anna's New World of Words, or Dictionarie of the Italian and English tongues, Collected, and newly much augmented by Iohn Florio, Reader of the Italian vnto the Soueraigne Maiestie of Anna, Crowned Queene of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, & c. And one of the Gentlemen of hir Royall Priuie Chamber.
“ Judith .” The Cambridge Old English Reader.
* Andrea Camilleri Reader Website ( in German, English, and Italian )
Their son, Charles Milner, who was educated in Hesse and England, established himself as a physician with a practice in London and later became Reader in English at Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen in the Kingdom of Württemberg ( modern state of Baden-Württemberg ).
The most recent English version of the Book of Concord was published in 2005 to commemorate the 425th anniversary of the publication of the Book of Concord, and the 475th anniversary of the presentation of The Augsburg Confession. It is a revision of the English text of the Concordia Triglotta and entitled Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions — A Reader ’ s Edition of the Book of Concord and edited by Paul T. McCain, Edward A. Engelbrecht, Robert C. Baker, and Gene E. Veith.
Born in 1951, he retired in 2007 after working as Reader in English in Government Brennen College, Thalassery.
Subsequent works on Old English included An Anglo-Saxon Reader ( 1876 ), The Oldest English Texts ( 1885 ) and A Student's Dictionary of Anglo-Saxon ( 1896 ).
* The Greek Reader, by Frederic Jacobs, new edition, with English notes, critical and explanatory, a metrical index to Homer and Anacreon, and a copious lexicon.
Another understanding was proposed by the Cambridge Old English Reader in 2004, namely that the poem is essentially concerned to state: " Let us ( good Christians, that is ) remind ourselves where our true home lies and concentrate on getting there "
" The Cambridge Old English Reader ", Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2004
* Kariera Nikosia Dyzmy ( 2002 ) as English Reader

English and utterly
These men are utterly ignorant of everything English and could not if they tried instruct their pupils in any of the duties which the connection of the Province with England casts upon them.
But on August 14, the much-outnumbered Portuguese, aided by 500 English archers, utterly defeated the Castilians and their French allies at Aljubarrota.
* W. C. Fields nurtured a character that was not far from himself in real life, being misanthropic, misogynistic, and a hard drinker, as well as lovingly massaging the English language through the utterly unique bellow of his voice and his famous bulbous nose.
The earliest use of oubliette in French dates back to 1374, but its earliest adoption in English is Walter Scott's Ivanhoe in 1819: ' The place was utterly dark — the oubliette, as I suppose, of their accursed convent.
The eighth Article of the Demands of the Western Rebels states: " and so we the Cornyshe men ( whereof certen of us understande no Englysh ) utterly refuse thys newe English ".
However, it was not until a severe economic crisis, on account of harvest failure and the economic adventure in Panama where the Scots tried to establish a colony ( an attempt which failed utterly due to fever, hostile natives and lacking English co-operation ), that the Scottish Parliament did agree to a union of Parliaments.
The English Reader utterly dominated the American market for readers for over a generation from 1815 into the 1840s.
The novel is written with playful malapropisms: Barnes takes unusual English words and uses them with utterly different meanings.
He has an English accent and is utterly anglophilic.
He was described by John Arlott as " shrewd, varied, and utterly accurate, beating down as unremittingly as February rain ", and " the modern master of bowling in English conditions ".
The Laws in Wales Acts 1535 – 1542 brought Wales entirely under English law ; when the 1535 Act declares the intention utterly to extirpe alle and singular sinister usages and customs belonging to Wales, Welsh law was probably the main target.
He purports to relate the fate of a friend of his named Enoch Soames, an utterly obscure, forgettable, miserable and unsuccessful English writer.

English and dominated
Despite his growing admiration for Wallace and his cause, Robert is dominated by his father, who wishes to secure the throne for his son by submitting to the English.
In early English literature the short couplet poem was dominated by the poetic epigram and proverb, especially in the translations of the Bible and the Greek and Roman poets.
The idea of a feudal state or period, in the sense of either a regime or a period dominated by lords who possess financial or social power and prestige, became widely held in middle of the 18th century, thanks to works such as Montesquieu's De L ' Esprit des Lois ( 1748 ; published in English as The Spirit of the Laws ), and Henri de Boulainvilliers ’ s Histoire des anciens Parlements de France ( 1737 ; published in English as An Historical Account of the Antient Parliaments of France or States-General of the Kingdom, 1739 ).
Its mixture of political satire and grand opera parody mimicked Offenbach's Orpheus in the Underworld and La belle Hélène, which ( in translation ) then dominated the English musical stage.
This dance music genre, not to be confused with improvised freestyle rapping, was dominated, at the time, by electro funk beats and vaguely Latin melodic and percussion elements, over which Latino vocalists sang melodramatic pop vocals, usually in English.
Webster's dictionaries dominated the English speaking world.
Sullivan wrote only one grand opera, Ivanhoe ( following the efforts of a number of young English composers beginning about 1876 ), but he claimed that even his light operas constituted part of a school of " English " opera, intended to supplant the French operettas ( usually performed in bad translations ) that had dominated the London stage from the mid-19th century into the 1870s.
In their book, Gross and Levitt reported an anti-intellectual trend in university liberal arts departments ( especially English departments ) which had caused them to become dominated by a " trendy " branch of post-modernist deconstructionism.
Both the kingdom and duchy were dominated by a small number of major barons who owned lands on both sides of the English Channel, with the lesser barons beneath them usually having more localised holdings.
In North and West Wales, Welsh is widely spoken as a first language, but much less so in the more English dominated South East of the country.
Carte later said it was " the scheme of my life " to found a school of high-quality, family-friendly English comic opera, in contrast to the bawdy burlesques and adaptations of French operettas that dominated the London musical stage at that time.
The new regime thus established was dominated by the most powerful surviving members of the English ruling class, Stigand, Archbishop of Canterbury, Ealdred, Archbishop of York, and the brothers Edwin, Earl of Mercia, and Morcar, Earl of Northumbria.
Anne reacted very differently to the two powerful favourites who dominated the second half of her husband's English reign, Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset, and George Villiers, the future Duke of Buckingham.
The Danelaw, as recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle ( also known as the Danelagh ; Old English: Dena lagu ; ), is a historical name given to the part of England in which the laws of the " Danes " held sway and dominated those of the Anglo-Saxons.
Contrary to the thought that much of the local economy is now dominated by tourism, Ooty is still a supply base and market town for the surrounding area which is still largely dependent on agriculture, notably the cultivation of " English Vegetables " and " English Fruits " grown locally.
His reign was dominated by the war with the English, and two major problems: recovering the territories ceded at Bretigny, and ridding the land of the Tard-Venus ( French for " latecomers "), mercenary companies that turned to robbery and pillage after the treaty was signed.
The name may derive from the Old English Cumberwell or Comberwell, meaning ' Well of the Britons ', referring to remaining Celtic inhabitants of an area dominated by Anglo-Saxons.
Extensive monastic complexes dominated English towns of any size, but most were less than half full.
The developments spread to Anglo-Norman possessions in Ireland where this English style of castles dominated throughout the 13th century, although the deteriorating Irish economy of the 14th century brought this wave of building to an end.
The subsequent years also marked almost the end of indigenous English fortification design – by the 1580s English castle improvements were almost entirely dominated by imported European experts.

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