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name and Fordham
In 494, Gelasius wrote a very influential letter, known as Duo sunt, to Anastasius on the topic of Church-State relations, whose political impact was felt for almost a millennium .< ref name = " Fordham ">
* Thought, the short name of Thought: A review of Culture and Idea, Fordham University Quarterly, a publication of Fordham University
The Office of Service and Justice at Fordham University bears her name, at both of the university's campuses in the city: the one at Lincoln Center in Manhattan and its main campus in the Bronx.
Their name, the Rams, comes from the nickname of Fordham University.
At age 18, Copperfield enrolled at Fordham University and was cast in the lead role of the Chicago-based musical The Magic Man ( written by Barbara D ' Amato and directed by Holland, MI's John Tamimi ) three weeks into his freshman year, adopting his new stage name " David Copperfield " from the famous Charles Dickens novel.
Today, Fordham Abbey is the name of the Grade II * listed Georgian manor house, built on the site of the Priory.
The name " Fordham " means " homestead or enclosure by a ford ".
The name Fordham was given by John Archer, a Dutch settler who had anglicized his name, when he established a community at 225th Street near the Harlem River in 1666.
The station building sits above the tracks on the Fordham Road ( East 190th Street ) overpass, and still bears the name New York Central Railroad on its facade.
Diana Mary Villiers Negroponte ( born 1947 ) is an English-born American trade lawyer and adjunct professor of law at Fordham University whose professional name is Diana Villiers Negroponte.
The team name is the " Fordham Rams.

name and ("
As the name Asia came to be extended to other areas east of the Mediterranean, the name for Anatolian became specified as Asia Minor (" Lesser Asia ", Μικρὰ Ἀσία ) in Late Antiquity.
** Altenberg, the German name for Vieille Montagne (" old mountain " in French ), the former zinc mine in Kelmis, Moresnet
In 1973, Arau acted in and directed Calzónzin Inspector (" Cazonci " or " Caltzontzin " was the term used in the Purépecha culture, to name their emperors.
The name of the town was then changed to Anbar (" granaries ").
The name comes from the Ancient Greek ἀ a-(" not ") and μέθυστος methustos (" intoxicated "), a reference to the belief that the stone protected its owner from drunkenness.
The name was one of the titles (" epithets ") given to the Greek goddess Hera and as such is usually taken to mean " one who comes to save warriors ".
Wace usually only refers to li roi (" the king ") without naming him, and someone has taken an early mention of Uther's epithet Pendragon as the name of his brother.
His mother Irene Worley (" Lolly ") was a writer of short stories who published under the name " Mary James ".
Ares may also be accompanied by Kydoimos, the demon of the din of battle ; the Makhai (" Battles "); thev " Hysminai " (" Acts of manslaughter "); Polemos, a minor spirit of war, or only an epithet of Ares, since it has no specific dominion ; and Polemos's daughter, Alala, the goddess or personification of the Greek war-cry, whose name Ares uses as his own war-cry.
The Haggada identifies them as separate people, the second being the first Abimelech's son, and that his original name was Benmelech (" son of the King ") but changed his name to his father's.
The name of the group is derived from the Arabic ابو, abu (" father of ") and sayyaf (" Swordsmith ").
The name was one of the titles (" epithets ") given to the Greek goddess Hera and as such is usually taken to mean " one who comes to save warriors ".
The Seljuq Turks then arrived in 1071 and changed its name to Kara Hissar (" black castle ") after the ancient fortress situated upon a volcanic rock 201 meters above the town.
In early 1964, Benny and Christina joined a group with the odd name " Elverkets Spelmanslag " (" The Electricity Board Folk Music Group "), who by no means was a folk music ensemble: the name was a punning reference to their electric instruments.
The tribal name, probably a derivation from batawjō (" good island ", from Germanic bat-" good, excellent " and awjō " island, land near water "), refers to the region's fertility, today known as the fruitbasket of the Netherlands ( the Betuwe ).
The " warrior " derivation was adopted by the linguist, Julius Pokorny, who presented it as being from Indo-European * bhei ( ə )-, * bhī -, " hit ;" however, not finding any Celtic names close to it ( except for the Boii ), he adduces examples somewhat more widely from originals further back in time: phohiio-s -, a Venetic personal name ; Boioi, an Illyrian tribe ; Boiōtoi, a Greek tribal name (" the Boeotians ") and a few others.
Although he must have been familiar with the ancient name, Balcia, meaning a supposed island in the Baltic Sea, and although he may have been aware of the Baltic words containing the stem balt -, " white ", as " swamp ", he reports that he followed the local use of balticus from baelt (" belt ") because the sea stretches to the east " in modum baltei " (" in the manner of a belt ").
This thesis is supported by the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, explaining that the Turko-Mongol name Timur underwent a similar evolution, from the Sanskrit word cimara (" iron ") via a modified version * čimr to the final Turkicized version timür, with-ür replacing-r due to the Turkish vowel harmony ( hence babr → babür ).

name and ford
He first built a small villa and named it Abbotsford, creating the name from a ford nearby where previously abbots of Melrose Abbey used to cross the river.
The name comes from Greek Bosporos ( Βόσπορος ), which the ancient Greeks analysed as bous ' ox ' + poros ' means of passing a river, ford, ferry ', thus meaning ' ox-ford ', which is a reference to Io ( mythology ) from Greek mythology who was transformed into a cow and condemned to wander the earth until she crossed the Bosphorus where she met Prometheus.
, meaning " town of the hurdled ford ", is the common name for the city in modern Irish.
The name Hertford is derived from the Anglo-Saxon heort ford, meaning deer crossing ( of a watercourse ).
A neighbouring Roman road with a ford used in olden days by the abbots of Melrose suggested the name of Abbotsford.
The name " Hereford " is said to come from the Anglo Saxon " here ", an army or formation of soldiers, and the " ford ", a place for crossing a river.
The town's name therefore indicates an ideal resting-place, as it lay by a ford across the Oker River.
The name is a fusion of the Old English strǣt, meaning " street ", and ford, meaning that a Roman road forded the River Avon at the site of the town.
The name is locative and descriptive of crossing points over the River Derwent being derived from a combination of the words stone, ford and bridge i. e. stoneford and bridge.
It is supposed by some to be the same as the " Adam " of Joshua 3: 16, the name of which still lingers in Damieh, a ford of the Jordan river.
The name of the town is thought to derive from the name of a Saxon chief called Beda, and a ford crossing the River Great Ouse.
The name Dordrecht comes from Thyre, the name of a river, and Middle Dutch drecht " ford ", thus meaning " Thure river crossing ".
The name ' Solway ' is of Anglo-Saxon origin, and originates in the thirteenth century as the name of a ford across the mud flats at Eskmouth.
The Saxon name would have been Gyldeford, meaning golden ford.
" Another version, given in an argument before the State Senate in 1852, is that the French name Six Cailloux, meaning " six stones ," was given to a ford on the Umpqua River by Michel LaFrambois and a party of Hudson's Bay Company trappers in 1832, because six large stones or rocks lay in the river where they crossed.
The name is recorded as Breguntford in 705 in an Anglo-Saxon charter and means ' ford over the River Brent '.
The name of the river is Celtic and means ' holy one ' and the '- ford ' suffix is Old English.
However the most generally accepted explanation by place name genealogists is that the settlement's name comes from an origin of " Shingly Ford "— that is, a ford over a waterway containing shingles.
The name is first recorded in 1067 as Strætforda and means ' ford on a Roman road '.
The name was later changed to " Oxford " due to the presence of a narrow crossing of the Chocolocco Creek that allowed farmers to ford cattle from one side of the creek to the other.
Another is that the name refers to a ford across the river administered by the church, the pious.

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