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name and poem
With this derivation, the name would have a double meaning in the poem: When the hero is functioning rightly, his men bring grief to the enemy, but when wrongly, his men get the grief of war.
The 1963 film The King's Breakfast was based on Milne's poem of the same name.
It is the most widely copied Old English poem, and appears in 45 manuscripts, but its attribution to Bede is not absolutely certain — not all manuscripts name Bede as the author, and the ones that do are of later origin than those that do not.
Later in the work, when Snorri describes Baldr, he gives a longer description, citing Grímnismál, though he does not name the poem:
The name was inspired by Edgar Allan Poe's poem The Raven, as Poe lived for a time in Baltimore, died there in 1849, and is buried there.
The chosen name, " Ravens ," alludes to the famous poem The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe, who spent the early part of his career in Baltimore, and is also buried there .< ref >
William Cowper's poem, Boadicea, an ode ( 1782 ) popularised an alternate version of the name.
The poem was originally published anonymously ( under the pen name " Phin ", based on Thayer's college nickname, " Phineas ").
It was influenced not just by name of the poem, which was widely popular in the 1910s, but also because he tended to strike out frequently in his early career so fans and writers started calling him " strikeout Casey ".
* His collection of short stories, " Worlds Enough & Time ", takes its name from the first line of the poem To His Coy Mistress by British poet Andrew Marvell: ' Had we but world enough, and time ,'.
In the poem Carmen Campidoctoris, Babieca appears as a gift from " a barbarian " to El Cid, so its name could also be derived from " Barbieca ", or " horse of the barbarian ".
The final stanza of the poem contains a mention of Hel, though not by name:
Many ancient critics also rejected Theogony ( e. g. Pausanias 9. 31. 3 ) but that seems rather perverse since Hesiod mentions himself by name in that poem ( line 22 ).
In 1856, Carroll published the following poem anonymously under the name Upon the Lonely Moor.
In the song of the same name, many of the lyrics take influence from the poem.
* The poem may have inspired the 2012 song of the same name by groove metal band Lamb of God.
Ovid provides two etymologies for June's name in his poem concerning the months entitled the Fasti.
" Following in the June 1816 Eclectic Review, Josiah Conder dismissed the poem: " As to ' Kubla Khan ', and the ' Pains of Sleep ', we can only regret the publication of them, as affording a proof that the Author over-rates the importance of his name.
This poem gives us the clue about the name ' Redin '.
Sachs believes the strong rhythm of the music, a derivation of the name from a term meaning " to stamp " and the quotation from the Froissart poem above definitely label the estampie as a dance.
His name is also mentioned in the Old English poem Widsith.
Odysseus ( or ; Greek:, Odusseus ), also known by the Roman name Ulysses (; ), was the perhaps fictional Greek king of Ithaca and the hero of Homer's epic poem the Odyssey.
However, unlike the cited examples, a number of Oxford's poems did appear in printed miscellanies in his lifetime, and the first poem published under Oxford's name was printed in 1572, 17 years before Puttenham's book was published.
Under his pen name, Muhibbi, Suleiman composed this poem for Roxelana:
In the ninth and tenth centuries, however, notably with the compilation of the Kokinshū, the short poem became the dominant form of poetry in Japan, and the originally general word became the standard name for this form.

name and stands
The Canadian Aboriginal syllabics are also an abugida rather than a syllabary as their name would imply, since each glyph stands for a consonant which is modified by rotation to represent the following vowel.
There are various accounts concerning the origin of the settlement's name ; one states that Allen and Rumsey decided to name it for their wives, both named Ann, and for the stands of burr oak in the of land they purchased for $ 800 from the federal government at $ 1. 25 per acre.
Hardware is the name given to the stands that support the instruments.
Generally speaking, unlike dictionary entries, which focus on linguistic information about words, encyclopedia articles focus on factual information to cover the thing or concept for which the article name stands.
In some older documents, and in the name Bevatron, the symbol BeV is used, which stands for billion electron volts ; it is equivalent to the GeV.
More broadly the term is used in a wide number of contexts for an image, picture, or representation ; it is a sign or likeness that stands for an object by signifying or representing it either concretely or by analogy, as in semiotics ; by extension, icon is also used, particularly in modern culture, in the general sense of symbol — i. e. a name, face, picture, edifice or even a person readily recognized as having some well-known significance or embodying certain qualities: one thing, an image or depiction, that represents something else of greater significance through literal or figurative meaning, usually associated with religious, cultural, political, or economic standing.
The name " JPEG " stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group, the name of the committee that created the JPEG standard and also other still picture coding standards.
Bruckner remarks that the name of the Lombards stands in close relation to the worship of Odin, whose many names include " the Long-bearded " or " the Grey-bearded ", and that the Lombard given name Ansegranus (" he with the beard of the gods ") shows that the Lombards had this idea of their chief deity.
But by convention, the LR name stands for the form of parsing invented by Donald Knuth, and excludes the earlier, less powerful precedence methods.
The current company name contains the semantic pleonasm " AvtoVAZ ", which stands for " Avtomobilniy Volzhsky Avtomobilny Zavod " (" Automobile Volga Automobile Plant ").
In addition to name the food stand after the owners ’ last name or the food sold, these food stands were also often named after the owners ’ nicknames.
" M " in the start of a mission name stands for Mercury.
The letter “ d ”, which stands for penny, is derived from the Latin name of the Roman coin, the denarius.
The name stands for " Operating System / 2 ," because it was introduced as part of the same generation change release as IBM's " Personal System / 2 ( PS / 2 )" line of second-generation personal computers.
The PDP-10 was a mainframe computer family manufactured by Digital Equipment Corporation ( DEC ) from the late 1960s on ; the name stands for " Programmed Data Processor model 10 ".
Its name, which derives from the neighbouring Westminster Abbey, may refer to either of two structures: the Old Palace, a medieval building complex that was destroyed by fire in 1834, and its replacement New Palace that stands today.
As the name implies, it is a reduced instruction set computer ( RISC ) architecture, where the PA stands for Precision Architecture.
In early 1944, construction work started for the test stands and launching pads in the Austrian Alps ( code name Salamander ), with target areas planned for the Tatra Mountains, the Arlberg range, and the area of the Ortler mountain.
" A statue of Sleipnir ( 1998 ) stands in Wednesbury, England, a town which takes its name from the Anglo-Saxon version of Odin, Wōden.
Despite its name, this is not where a player legally stands when making a serve.
As it stands today, the nine kwans are the founders of taekwondo, though not all the kwans used the name.

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