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Oxford and Middleton
On the same English Literature course was Robert Graves, and the two were close friends during their time at Oxford together, but Blunden found university life unsatisfactory and left in 1920 to take up a literary career, at first acting as assistant to Middleton Murry on the Athenaeum magazine.
Middleton attended Queen ’ s College, Oxford, matriculating in 1598, although he did not graduate.
The most recent and authoritative Middleton canon has been established by the editors of the Oxford Middleton ( 2007 ).
* The Oxford Middleton Project
Still a firm protege of Baldwin's, Irwin returned to Education in 1932, a position enlivened by his continuing ( now backroom ) role in Indian politics, his attainment of the position of Master of the Middleton Hunt in 1932 and his election as Chancellor of Oxford University in 1933.
The editors of the Oxford Shakespeare, having concluded that Middleton and Shakespeare were jointly responsible for the play, assign the play to 1605, on the basis of previous analyses of colloquialism-in-verse and rare vocabulary.
The editor of the Oxford edition, John Jowett, states that Middleton,
* Laughton, J. K. Middleton, Charles, First Baron Barham from Dictionary of National Biography ( Oxford: University Press, 1894 ).
Charles Middleton in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ( Oxford: University Press, 2006 ).
Nowell was educated at Middleton, near Rochdale, Lancashire and at Brasenose College, Oxford, where he is said to have shared rooms with John Foxe the martyrologist.
Note: This synopsis follows the scene divisions from Stanley Wells ' edition of the play in Thomas Middleton: The Collected Works ( eds John Lavagnino and Gary Taylor, Oxford, 2007 ).
The play is attributed to Middleton in Jackson's facsimile edition of the 1607 quarto ( 1983 ), in Bryan Loughrey and Neil Taylor's edition of Five Middleton Plays ( Penguin, 1988 ), and in Thomas Middleton: The Collected Works ( Oxford, 2007 ).
A summary of the great variety of evidence for Middleton's authorship is contained in the relevant sections of Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture, general editors Gary Taylor and John Lavagnino ( Oxford, 2007 ).
Bryan Ronald Wilson, ( 25 June 1926, Leeds – 9 October 2004, Middleton Stoney, Oxfordshire ), was Reader Emeritus in Sociology at the University of Oxford and President of the International Society for the Sociology of Religion 1971-75.
Nick Middleton ( born 1960 ) is a physical geographer and supernumerary fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford.
* Nick Middleton, The Geography of Dust Storms ( University of Oxford DPhil thesis, 1986 )
* Nick Middleton, Atlas of Environmental Issues ( Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988 )
* Nick Middleton, Atlas of World Issues ( Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988 )

Oxford and its
* Lewis Ayres, Nicaea and its Legacy: An Approach to Fourth-Century Trinitarian Theology ( New York: Oxford University Press, 2004 ).
Although the phrase " Arabic numeral " is frequently capitalized, it is sometimes written in lower case: for instance, in its entry in the Oxford English dictionary.
There were many more people involved in the Oxford team, and at one point the entire Dunn School was involved in its production.
Though some deplore the name, arguing that it makes the industry look like a poor cousin to Hollywood, it has its own entry in the Oxford English Dictionary.
* Coogan, Michael D. ( 2009 ) A Brief Introduction to the Old Testament: the Hebrew Bible in its Context Oxford University Press
Adherents of the Oxford Movement, begun in 1833, raised questions about the relationship of the Church of England to the apostolic church and thus about its forms of worship.
In The United Kingdom, Oxford University has led in providing extensive research in the field through its Community Development Journal, used worldwide by sociologists and community development practitioners.
Charles was the resident poet on Channel 4's Black on Black ( 1985 ), and its entertainment-based successor, Club Mix ( 1986 ), and appeared, weekly, as a John Cooper Clarke-style ' punk poet ' on the BBC2 pop music programme Oxford Road Show under the name of " Susan Williams ".
The Oxford English Dictionary says its earliest quotation for " clipper " is from 1830.
* Dempsey, T., Reverend, The Delphic oracle, its early history, influence and fall, Oxford: B. H.
In a 2003 European Commission report, TU / e was ranked as 3rd among European research universities ( after Cambridge and Oxford, at equality with TU Munich and thus making it the highest ranked Technical University in Europe ), based on the impact of its scientific research.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, institutionalisation of the word became complete with its first appearance in a dictionary ( 1848 ) and first appearance in an encyclopedia ( 1868 ).
* 1214 – The University of Oxford receives its charter.
while in British literature, The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature sees modernism " ceding its predominance to postmodernism " as early as 1939 .< ref > J.
The Oxford English Dictionary records its earliest known English-language usage of brainwashing in an article by Edward Hunter in New Leader published on 7 October 1950.
Since 2005 Apple Inc .' s Mac OS X operating system has come bundled with a dictionary application and widget which credits as its source " Oxford American Dictionaries ", and contains the full text of NOAD2.
The Amazon Kindle reading device also uses NOAD as its built-in dictionary, along with a choice for the Oxford Dictionary of English.
A notable exception is Japan's Cambridge and Oxford Society, probably arising from the fact that the Cambridge Club was founded there first, and also had more members than its Oxford counterpart when they amalgamated in 1905.
In 1933, it fully replaced the name in all occurrences to The Oxford English Dictionary ( OED ) in its reprinting as twelve volumes with a one volume supplement and more supplements came over the years until in 1989 when the second edition was published in twenty volumes.
Looney rejected the play altogether, arguing that its style and the " dreary negativism " it promoted were inconsistent with Shakespeare's " essentially positivist " soul, and so could not have been written by Oxford.
Measure for Measure differs from its sources in that Claudio's crime was changed from murder to seduction of a maiden — the same crime that sent Oxford to the Tower of London.
A scene was developing around Radio Birdman and its main performance venue, the Oxford Tavern ( later the Oxford Funhouse ), located in Sydney's Darlinghurst suburb.
As a result, the English system of common law developed in parallel to Roman-based civil law, with its practitioners being trained at the Inns of Court in London rather than receiving degrees in Canon or Civil Law at the Universities of Oxford or Cambridge.

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