Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Robert I" ¶ 6
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Sometimes and known
`` Sometimes we'd have trouble persuading her to make tax-exempt charitable contributions, and I've known her to quarrel with a plumber over a bill for fixing a faucet ; ;
Sometimes the monks were directly subject to the lay abbot ; sometimes he appointed a substitute to perform the spiritual functions, known usually as dean ( decanus ), but also as abbot ( abbas legitimas, monasticus, regularis ).
Sometimes an internal standard is added at a known concentration directly to an analytical sample to aid in quantitation.
Sometimes connected to the Atlantis story is the submerged rock formation known as the Bimini Road off the island of Bimini in the Bahamas, which is in the Triangle by some definitions.
Sometimes centimes are known as francs or in former Spanish areas, pesetas.
Sometimes for convenience a suitable amount of powder and a bullet were wrapped in a paper package, known as a cartridge.
Sometimes a head of state assumes office as a state becomes legal and political reality, before a formal title for the highest office is determined ; thus in the since 1 January 1960 independent republic Cameroon ( Cameroun, a former French colony ), the first President, Ahmadou Babatoura Ahidjo, was at first not styled président but ' merely ' known as Chef d ' état ( literal French for ' Head of State ') until 5 May 1960 ; in Uganda, military coup leader since 25 January 1971 Idi Amin was formally styled military head of State till 21 February 1971, only from then on regular ( but unconstitutional, not elected ) President.
Sometimes, however, a proto-language can be identified with a historically known language.
Sometimes the trinity consists of Badb, Macha and Anann, collectively known as the Morrígna.
Sometimes this will be the culmination of an entire feud, ending it for the immediate future ( known as a blowoff match ).
Sometimes the purpose of a battle, if not a war, was to capture women, a practice known as raptio ; the Rape of the Sabines was a large mass abduction by the founders of Rome.
Sometimes known as Minister of Youth.
( Sometimes known as the ' need for contrast ' argument in GCSE Religious studies examinations.
Sometimes a trio of works is known as a trilogy because of its creator.
Sometimes they may also say " ee-sa " because the final " t " in her name was a feminine suffix, which is known to have been dropped in speech during the last stages of the Egyptian language.
Sometimes noise is added to images to hide the sudden transitions inherent in digital representation of color, known as " banding ".
Sometimes this is known as quaternary PSK, quadriphase PSK, 4-PSK, or 4-QAM.
Sometimes known as a " pseudo-vowel ", a word final non-syllabic vowel that is often reduced in quick speech to a velarisation or pharyngisation ( respectively ) of the preceding consonant often accompanied with aspiration.
Sometimes known as perching birds or, less accurately, as songbirds, the passerines form one of the most diverse terrestrial vertebrate orders: with over 5, 000 identified species, it has roughly twice as many species as the largest of the mammal orders, the Rodentia.
Sometimes they are unofficially known as regents themselves.
Sometimes a shaft will be made of two different types of wood fastened together, resulting in what is known as a footed arrow.
Sometimes the term also includes the inhabitants of Tenochtitlan's two principal allied city-states, the Acolhuas of Texcoco and the Tepanecs of Tlacopan, who together with the Mexica formed the Aztec Triple Alliance which controlled what is often known as " the Aztec Empire ".
Sometimes the event of aborting can be given a special name, as in the case of an abort involving a Unix kernel where it is known as a kernel panic.
; Night Of Anguish < span style =" font-weight: normal ;">( Sometimes known as Valjean At The Barricades )</ span >: Valjean arrives in an army uniform.
A similar essay of homosexual men begins more obviously with the line " Sometimes men are kissing " but is less well known.

Sometimes and Robert
Sometimes referred to as the " Robert Burns of Wales ".
Sometimes they were copied from landscape paintings by painters such as Claude Lorrain and Hubert Robert.
Sometimes archival research later identifies the name, as when the " Master of Flémalle "— defined by three paintings in the Städelsches Kunstinstitut in Frankfurt — was identified as Robert Campin.
Sometimes described in the media as a " pediatrician to the stars ", he counts numerous celebrities or their children among his patients, including Leonardo DiCaprio, Madonna, Pamela Anderson, Harrison Ford, Robert De Niro, and Cindy Crawford.
Sometimes called " the father of Fulton County ", Cady named the new county after Robert Fulton, who was related by marriage to Cady's wife, Margaret Livingston.
Sometimes, famous paintings are re-created using headless dummies with the ' Africanised ' clothing instead of their original costumes, for example Gainsborough's Mr and Mrs Andrews Without Their Heads ( 1998 ), Reverend on Ice ( 2005 ) ( after The Rev Robert Walker Skating on Duddingston Loch by Raeburn ) and
Sometimes he is mentioned in the company of the " ethno-poeticists " associated with Jerome Rothenberg, including: Armand Schwerner, Rochelle Owens, Kenneth Irby, Robert Kelly, Jed Rasula, Gustaf Sobin, and John Taggart.
Retrospective reviews were less forgiving, with Allmusic stating that both the compositions and the performances are uniformly weak, adding up to " a competent, if perfunctory effort in the band's familiar style ", while Robert Christgau's review consisted of a single sentence followed by the note ' Giveaway: "( Sometimes I Feel So ) Uninspired.
* Bob Kelly and Sometimes Colin Quinn-Hosted by comedian Robert Kelly, and rarely Colin Quinn co-hosts with him.
Sometimes they would drop in on Will Rogers, Will Durant, Robert Benchley or even on me, for their range of friends was very wide.
Sometimes called the " Waterloo of the Confederacy ," Five Forks helped set in motion a series of events that led to Robert E. Lee's subsequent surrender at Appomattox Court House.

Sometimes and II
Sometimes Pope Boniface II ( 530 532 ) is considered the first German Pope, although he was in fact an Ostrogoth.
Sometimes vacancies arise in quick succession, as in the early 1970s when Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr. and William Rehnquist were nominated to replace Hugo Black and John Marshall Harlan II, who retired within a week of each other.
Sometimes, the jet exhaust is vented above the wing surface to shield it from observers below, as in the B-2 Spirit, and the unstealthy A-10 Thunderbolt II.
Sometimes called < u > Churchill II </ u >.
Sometimes the references are blatant ; in episode 18 of Super Dimension Fortress Macross, the dying Roy Fokker not only repeats the famous words of Mr. Spock from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan -- " The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few ..." but adds Captain Kirk's reply -- " or the one ".
Sometimes these later tercios did not stick to the all-volunteer model of the regular Imperial Spanish army when the Habsburg king Philip II found himself in need of more troops, he raised a tercio of Catalan criminals to fight in Flanders, a trend he continued with most Catalan criminals for the rest of his reign.
Sometimes referred to as Krzysztof Radziwiłł II, to distinguish him from his father, Krzysztof Mikołaj ' Piorun ' Radziwłł.
Sometimes called the Vučedol civilization, though apparently illiterate, it was contemporary with the Sumer period in Mesopotamia, the Early Dynastic period in Egypt and the earliest settlements of Troy ( Troy I and II ).
Sometimes in the early 1800, Punta was renamed Punta Isabel, in honor of Queen Isabela II of Spain.
Sometimes the midface can be mobilised as well by using a Lefort II, or Lefort III osteotomy.
Sometimes the Thai chiefdoms in the Chao Phraya valley were put under the Angkorian control under strong monarchs ( including Suryavarman II and Jayavarman VII ) but they were mostly independent.

1.105 seconds.