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name and King's
The 1963 film The King's Breakfast was based on Milne's poem of the same name.
In the years following the Revolution the poetic device " Columbia " was used as a symbol of both Columbus and America, King's College of New York changed its name in 1792 to Columbia, and the new capitol in Washington was subtitled District of Columbia.
* The Vancouver Quarter Shopping Centre bears his name in his home town of King's Lynn, England.
The BBC produced a feature-length television drama, All the King's Men ( not to be confused with the novel of the same name by Robert Penn Warren ), that focused attention on a unit ( the " Sandringham Company ") that was decimated at Gallipoli and included men from King George V's estate at Sandringham House.
* Highway 65 ( King's Highway ): connects Irbid in the northern region to Aqaba, it takes the name and route of the historic King's Highway
The name of Kington Magna means great ' King's Town, and the parish " figures conspicuously in the Domesday Book.
After the Napoleonic Wars the regiment received a new title: first, in 1815, its name was changed to The Duke of York's Own Rifle Corps and then, in 1830, to the King's Royal Rifle Corps ( KRRC ).
Among those who don't believe are a son of Alma who also shares the name Alma ( but he is usually differentiated as " Alma the Younger "), and King's Mosiah's own sons.
Bismarck had at first tried to rouse the peasants of his estate into an army to march on Berlin in the King's name.
The originally selected pseudonym (" Gus Pillsbury ") was the name of King's maternal grandfather ; but at the last moment King changed it to " Richard Bachman ," in tribute to crime author Donald E. Westlake's long-running pseudonym Richard Stark.
" The spelling discrepancy of the added ' y ' was later explained as a deus ex machina on the part of " The White " ( a force of good throughout King's Tower series ) to bring the total number of letters in her name to nineteen, a number prominent in King's series.
This story was reprinted in King's collection Nightmares & Dreamscapes in 1993 under his own name.
The Judiciary in Spain is integrated by judges and magistrates who administer justice in the King's name.
The court took its name from the " Star Chamber " or " Starred Chamber " which was built in the reign of King Edward II specifically for the meetings of the King's Council, though the origins of the name of the room itself are unclear.
It was with their second album, 1978's More Songs About Buildings and Food that the band began its long-term collaboration with producer Brian Eno, who had previously worked with Roxy Music, David Bowie, John Cale and Robert Fripp ; the title of Eno's 1977 song " King's Lead Hat " is an anagram of the band's name.
Following a series of post-Vatican II reforms, his feast day was changed and his name was added to the Roman Catholic calendar of saints in 1970 for celebration on 22 June jointly with St John Fisher, the only remaining bishop ( owing to the coincident natural deaths of eight aged bishops ) who, during the English Reformation, maintained, at the King's mercy, allegiance to the pope.
Stephen King got the name Castle Rock from the fictional mountain fort of the same name in Lord of the Flies, using the name to refer to a fictional town that has appeared in a number of King's novels.
King's fictional town of Castle Rock inspired the name of Rob Reiner's production company, Castle Rock Entertainment, which produced the 1990 film.
* Tiki King's Ukulele Brand name database – information on over 500 ukulele makers past and present
They summoned Parliament in the King's name and established a regency council until the King should come of age.

name and Scholars
Scholars theorize the form was originally used in Ionian dirges, with the name " elegy " derived from the Greek ε, λεγε ε, λεγε-" Woe, cry woe, cry!
It employs around 1, 000 faculty members .< ref name =" Faculty and Staff "> 77 Nobel laureates, 52 National Medal of Science recipients, 45 Rhodes Scholars, and 38 MacArthur Fellows are currently or have previously been affiliated with the university.
Scholars believe their name derives possibly from Proto-Germanic forms of " march " (" frontier, border ") and " men ".
Scholars believe that the commentary which appears under Rashi's name in those books was compiled by the students of Rabbi Saadiah of the Rhine, who incorporated material from Rashi's yeshiva.
Scholars generally agree that these copies were written at Monte Cassino and the end of the document refers to Abbas Raynaldus cu ... who was most probably one of the two abbots of that name at the abbey during that period.
The full name of the college is " The Master, Fellows and Scholars of the College of the Most Holy and Undivided Trinity in the Town and University of Cambridge ".
Scholars have connected the month event and Yule time period to the Wild Hunt ( a ghostly procession in the winter sky ), the god Odin ( who is attested in Germanic areas as leading the Wild Hunt and, as mentioned above, bears the name Jólnir ), and increased supernatural activity, such as the aforementioned Wild Hunt and the increased activities of draugar — undead beings who walk the earth.
The full formal name of the college is " The Master, Fellows and Scholars of the College of St John the Evangelist in the University of Cambridge ".
Scholars connect the name Canaan with, Kana ' an, the general Northwest Semitic name for this region.
King's Scholars are entitled to use the letters " KS " after their name and they can be identified by a black gown worn over the top of their tailcoats, giving them the nickname tugs ( Latin: togati, wearers of gowns ); and occasionally by a surplice in Chapel.
Scholars also believe that the name of the individual may originally have been Shammah, and became corrupted under the influence of the Shamgar in the Song of Deborah.
Scholars have proposed that Sif's hair may represent fields of golden wheat, that she may be associated with fertility, family, wedlock and / or that she is connected to rowan, and that there may be an allusion to her role or possibly her name in the Old English poem Beowulf.
Scholars have theorized a potential connection between Skaði and the god Ullr ( who is also associated with skiing and appears most frequently in place names in Sweden ), a particular relationship with the jötunn Loki, and that Scandinavia may be related to the name Skaði ( potentially meaning " Skaði's island ") or the name may be connected to an Old Norse noun meaning " harm ".
Scholars regard it very unlikely that the name was invented twice.
Scholars interpret this to mean that Eurysaces was true to his name and his father's nature rather than learning from experience.
Scholars have proposed that Dellingr is the personified dawn, and his name may appear both in an English surname and place name.
Scholars are not entirely convinced that the later character of Gawain is derived from the Welsh Gwalchmei ap Gwyar, but later Welsh writers clearly thought this was the case ; the name " Gwalchmei " consistently substitutes for " Gawain " in Cymric translations and adaptations of foreign works, such as the Welsh Romances of the Mabinogion.
The full name of the College, as indicated in its annual reports, is The Provost and Scholars of The Queen ’ s College in the University of Oxford.
Under the Foundation Charter ( of 1592 ), Scholars were part of the body corporate ( three Scholars were named in the charter " in the name of many ").
Scholars have different theories on the origin of the name " Iași ".

name and derives
The name presumably derives from the French royal house which never learned and never forgot ; ;
The Institute derives its name from Paul Von Groth's Chemische Krystallographie, a five-volume work which appeared between 1906 and 1919.
Do you say chantey, as if the word were derived from the French word chanter, to sing, or do you say shanty and think of a roughly built cabin, which derives its name from the French-Canadian use of the word chantier, with one of its meanings given as a boat-yard??
The name affirming the consequent derives from the premise Q, which affirms the " then " clause of the conditional premise.
EveR-1's name derives from the Biblical Eve, plus the letter r for robot.
It is an Ethiopian name of the Ge ‘ ez script, ’ ä bu gi da, taken from four letters of that script the way abecedary derives from Latin a be ce de.
The main feature of the family is the composite flower type in the form of capitula surrounded by involucral bracts. The name " Asteraceae " comes from Aster, the most prominent generum in the family, that derives from the Greek ἀστήρ meaning star, and is connected with its inflorescence star form.
The alternative name for the family, Umbelliferae, derives from the inflorescence being generally in the form of a compound umbel.
Their name derives from the Spanish el lagarto, which means " the lizard ".
From Thespis ' name derives the word thespian.
The League's modern name derives from its official meeting place, the island of Delos, where congresses were held in the temple and where the treasury stood until, in a symbolic gesture, Pericles moved it to Athens in 454 BC.
The actinide series derives its name from the group 3 element actinium.
The name " ablative " derives from the Latin ablatus, the ( irregular ) perfect passive participle of auferre " to carry away ".
Tradition derives the name from Aegina, the mother of Aeacus, who was born on and ruled the island.
The name derives from a Brythonic word Gobannia meaning " river of the blacksmiths ", and relates to the town's pre-Roman importance in iron smelting.
Plant potash lent the name to the element potassium, which was first derived from caustic potash, and also gave potassium its chemical symbol K ( cf German Kalium ), which ultimately derives from alkali.
The city grew along the valleys of the rivers Alcoa and Baça, from which it derives its name.
White suggests that the creature derives from sightings of the worm lizards of the same name.
Some Swedish historians believe the name derives from the cripple secondary god Balder of Nordic mythology.
The name Schwarzwald ( German for " Black Forest ") derives from the Romans who referred to the thickly forested mountains there as Silva Nigra ( Latin for " Black Forest ") because the dense growth of conifers in the forest blocked out most of the light inside the forest.
The name of the group, Boogie Down, derives from a nickname for the South Bronx section of The Bronx, one of the five boroughs of New York City.
The name probably derives from the Old English bēd, or prayer ; if Bede was given the name at his birth, then his family had probably always planned for him to enter the clergy.
It derives its name from, and records the visions of, Jeremiah, who lived in Jerusalem in the late 7th and early 6th centuries BC during the time of king Josiah and the fall of the Kingdom of Judah to the Babylonians, and who subsequently went into exile in Egypt.
It derives its name from, and records the visions of, the 6th century BC priest and prophet Ezekiel.

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