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name and Wakefield
The Wakefield Master gets his name from the geographic location where he lived, the market-town of Wakefield in Yorkshire.
One of those three, Joseph Ratzinger, was elected Pope in the resulting conclave and took the name Benedict XVI, another one ( Jaime Sin ) did not attend that conclave for health reasons and died shortly afterwards, and the third, William Wakefield Baum, turned 80 on 21 November 2006.
In November 1840 the New Zealand Company directors advised Wakefield that they wished to name the town at Lambton Harbour after the Duke of Wellington in recognition of his strong support for the company's principles of colonisation and his " strenuous and successful defence against its enemies of the measure for colonising South Australia ".
Edward Jerningham Wakefield reported that the settlers " took up the views of the directors with great cordiality and the new name was at once adopted ".
Edward once again assisted: this time Wakefield escaped to New Plymouth, New Zealand, under a false name, " Bowler ".
However the name was soon changed to Wakefield.
This name was after the town of Wakefield in Yorkshire, and not, as many assume, after Captain Arthur Wakefield who led the expedition that first established Nelson City and Province.
From Port Wakefield it resumes the name " Princes Highway ", and follows the coast, skirting Port Pirie to continue on to Port Augusta, where it terminates at the start of the Eyre Highway.
The Wakefield line is the name given to one of the rail services in the West Yorkshire Metro / South Yorkshire P. T. E.
Paul's form on the Junior, and then subsequently New Zealand team tour, did not go unnoticed by astute talent scouts in England and in the off season of 1993 / 94 he joined the Wakefield Trinity Wildcats of the English Rugby Football League Championship and was highly impressive, especially against the almost invincible at the time Wigan Warriors, where he almost pulled off the upset of the century against a team of legends including but to name just a few Dean Bell, Dennis Betts, Shaun Edwards, Andy Farrell, Martin Offiah and Va ' aiga Tuigamala.
Around 1820 the senior Rowland Hazard renamed the nearby industrial village to Wakefield after the town and family of the same name in England, who were friends of his.
Opened in March 1866 as an intermediate stop on the West Riding and Grimsby Railway's main line from Wakefield Westgate to Doncaster, the station was at first called " Adwick-le-Street and Carcroft "; the name was changed in 1880 to " Carcroft and Adwick-le-Street ".
Ladies of Letters is a BBC Radio 4 comedy series starring Patricia Routledge and Prunella Scales, based on the series of books of the same name written by Carole Hayman and Lou Wakefield.
The name of the town was, around 1849, changed to Port Wakefield, the surname of Edward Gibbon Wakefield, a former British Politician who was the driving force behind the colonisation of South Australia.
In November 1936, the range was surveyed by John Riddoch Rymill of the British Graham Land Expedition who gave the name " Mount Wakefield " to the central mountain in the range.
The name " Wakefield ", given by Rymill, has been transferred to nearby Wakefield Highland.

name and may
and ( 2 ) such other special funds as may, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, be required each to be a claims fund to be known by the name of the foreign government which has entered into a settlement agreement with the Government of the United States as described in subsection ( A ) of Section 4 of this Title.
Extreme caution should be used, however, to avoid the conflicting usage of an index word or electronic switch which may result from the assignment of more than one name or function to the same address.
This item may be a symbolic name or an actual one-digit or two-digit index word address in the range 3 - 94.
This item may be a symbolic name or an actual one-digit or two-digit index word address in the range 3 - 94.
You may take His name upon your lips in oaths and curses if you so choose.
The jacket biography describes him as a former racing driver, and he may indeed have been, although I do not recall having encountered his name either in the records or the literature.
Experiments have been conducted to attempt the synthesis of ununennium ( Uue ), which is likely to be the next member of the group, but they have all met with failure .< ref name =" link "> However, ununennium may not be an alkali metal due to relativistic effects, which are predicted to have a large influence on the chemical properties of superheavy elements.
Any place called Altenberg may have given rise to Altenberg as a family name, such as:
Abdul is a common Arabic name component ( but never a name by itself ; additionally the ending-ul and the beginning Al-are redundant ), but Alhazred may allude to Hazard, a pun on the book's destructive and dangerous nature, or a reference to Lovecraft's ancestors by that name.
Architects in Canada who have made outstanding contributions to the profession through contribution to research, scholarship, public service or professional standing to the good of architecture in Canada, or elsewhere, may be recognized as a Fellow of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada and can write FRAIC after their name.
* In a version of Scrabble called Clabbers, the name itself being an anagram of Scrabble, tiles may be placed in any order on the board as long as they anagram to a valid word.
Anagrams constructed without aid of a computer are noted as having been done " manually " or " by hand "; those made by utilizing a computer may be noted " by machine " or " by computer ", or may indicate the name of the computer program ( using Anagram Genius ).
The river's name may be attested to in the Gaulish ( Helvetic ) Berne zinc tablet which dates back to Roman Gaul.
In the later play Frogs, Aristophanes softens his criticisms, but even so it may be only for the sake of punning on Agathon's name ( ἁγαθός = " good ") that he makes Dionysus call him a " good poet ".
The name may refer to:
Who the Mormaer or King was at this time is not known, it may have been Óengus of Moray or his father, whose name is not known.
We are not certain that the word " democracy " was extant when systems that came to be called democratic were first instituted, but around 460 BC an individual is known whose parents had decided to name him ' Democrates ', a name which may have been manufactured as a gesture of democratic loyalty ; the name can also be found in Aeolian Temnus, not a particularly democratic state.
Aeon may also be an archaeic name for omnipotent beings, such as gods.
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 author opens with a prologue, usually taken to be addressed to an individual by the name of Theophilus ( though this name, which translates literally as " God-lover ", may be a nickname rather than a personal appellation ) and references " my earlier book "— almost certainly the Gospel of Luke.

name and derive
Their most widely known ethnonym is derived from the word ainu, which means " human " ( particularly as opposed to kamui, divine beings ), basically neither ethnicity nor the name of a race, in the Hokkaidō dialects of the Ainu language ; Emishi ( Ebisu ) and Ezo ( Yezo ) ( both ) are Japanese terms, which are believed to derive from another word for " human ", which otherwise survived in Sakhalin Ainu as enciw or enju.
The Batavi ( the name is believed to derive from a West Germanic root also present in " better " ( possibly meaning " superior men ")) moved into the Betuwe in the late 1st century BC.
A more recent etymology by Xavier Delamarre would derive it from a Common Celtic * Beltinijā, cognate with the name of the Lithuanian goddess of death Giltinė, the root of both being Proto-Indo-European * gʷelH-" suffering, death ".
Some sources derive the name of the weapon from the name of its first users — bernarda troopers called " carabiniers ", from the French carabine, from the Old French carabin ( soldier armed with a musket ), perhaps from escarrabin, gravedigger, perhaps from scarabee, scarab beetle.
Some theories assume the name “ Amper ” river may derive from the Celtic word for “ water ”.
The region's name is thought to derive from an Ingvaeonic stem flām-meaning " flooded land " ( from Proto-Germanic * flauma -).
The name might also derive from a Tungusic tribe related to Aisin.
Some medieval chronicles and literary works derive the name of the city of Buda from him. There is an ancient legend, amongst the Székely people that says: " After the death of Attila, in the bloody Battle of Krimhilda, 3000 Hun warriors managed to escape, to settle in a place called " Csigle mezo " ( today Transylvania ) and they changed their name from Huns to Szekler ( Szekely ).
D ' Anghiera added another name, Quizqueia ( supposedly " Mother of all Lands "), but later research shows that the word does not seem to derive from the original Arawak Taíno language.
The sins of the people of Lot became proverbial, and the Arabic words for homosexual behaviour ( liwat ) and for a person who performs such acts ( luti ) both derive from his name.
Jericho's name in Hebrew,, is thought to derive from Canaanite word Reaẖ, though an alternative theory holds that it is derived from the word meaning " moon " ( Yareaẖ ) in Canaanite, since the city was an early centre of worship for lunar deities.
The name of the plant family Proteaceae as well as the genus Protea, both to which P. cynaroides belongs to, derive from the name of the Greek god Proteus, a deity that was able to change between many forms.
The Karađorđevići derive their name from Đorđe Petrović " Karađorđe ", a farmer, hajduk and a former Austrian soldier.
It is also suggested that the " Puppeteer " name may derive from their social tendency to be very manipulative.
Two characters called Lugaid, a popular medieval Irish name thought to derive from Lugh, have three fathers: Lugaid Riab nDerg ( Lugaid of the Red Stripes ) was the son of the three Findemna or fair triplets, and Lugaid mac Con Roí was also known as mac Trí Con, " son of three hounds ".
The name marjoram ( Old French majorane, Medieval Latin majorana ) does not directly derive from the Latin word maior ( major ).
The name Merlot is thought to derive from the Old French word for young blackbird, merlot, a diminutive of merle, the blackbird ( Turdus merula ), probably from the color of the grape.
The name Malawi is thought to derive from the word Maravi.
Those who depart from this tradition derive the name from the same root but in an active sense, " he who draws out ", in the sense of " saviour, deliverer ".
In the Middle Irish period the name is often spelled Mórrígan with a lengthening diacritic over the ' o ', seemingly intended to mean " Great Queen " ( Old Irish mór, ' great '; this would derive from a hypothetical Proto-Celtic * Māra Rīganī-s ).
There have also been attempts by modern writers to link the Morrígan with the Welsh literary figure Morgan le Fay from Arthurian romance, in whose name ' mor ' may derive from a Welsh word for ' sea ', but the names are derived from different cultures and branches of the Celtic linguistic tree.
Whereas the origin of the name norn is uncertain, it may derive from a word meaning " to twine " and which would refer to their twining the thread of fate.

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