Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "White Russia" ¶ 16
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

appellation and together
Vini ( DOCG – DOC ): Elenco e Riferimenti Normativi al 07. 02. 2006 published by the Italian Ministry of Agriculture, which lists every DOC and DOCG wine as of February 2006, together with the dates of the decrees by which the appellation was instituted or modified, and the provinces in which the wine is permitted to be produced.

appellation and with
Whichever explanation is true, it seems certain the appellation was chosen by the Almoravids for themselves, partly with the conscious goal of forestalling any tribal or ethnic identifications.
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.
The New Zealand side, by then already synonymous with the appellation " All Blacks ", had an all black kit that clashed with the Lions ' blue.
All the clergy of Alexandria and Lower Egypt honored him with the appellation “ Papas ,” which means “ Our Father ,” as the Senior and Elder Bishop among all bishops, within the Egyptian Province, who are under his jurisdiction.
Bulwer-Lytton is also credited with the appellation for the Germans " Das Volk der Dichter und Denker ", that is, the people of poets and thinkers.
Cheese and wine are a major part of the cuisine, playing different roles regionally and nationally, with many variations and appellation d ' origine contrôlée ( AOC ) ( regulated appellation ) laws.
The jambon d ' Aoste, jambon de Savoie, jambon d ' Auvergne, and jambon d ' Ardèche are other French hams with some form of official appellation.
This has led many scholars to conclude that the appellation Catholic Church with its ecclesial connotation may have been in use as early as the last quarter of the 1st century.
Kalhana's metrical chronicle of the kings of Kashmir, called the Rajatarangini, has been pronounced by Professor H. H. Wilson to be the only Sanskrit composition yet discovered to which the appellation " history " can with any propriety be applied.
The appellation " Marxist – Leninist " is often used by those not familiar with communist ideology in any detail ( e. g. many newspapers and other media ) as a synonym for any kind of Marxism.
The appellation may date to the period, prior to 1856, when the City of San Francisco and the County of San Francisco were separate entities, the latter then coextensive with contemporary San Mateo County and San Francisco City-County.
After the merger of the PCs with the Canadian Alliance in 2003, there was debate as to whether the " Tory " appellation should survive at the federal level.
The appellation originates from the French style of making vanilla ice cream with a custard base, using vanilla pods, cream, and egg yolks.
The outlying regions, falling under the more basic " Petit Chablis " appellation, are planted on portlandian limestone which produces wines with less finesse.
The appellation Sussex remained in use as a ceremonial county until 1974, when the Lord-Lieutenant of Sussex was replaced with one each for East and West Sussex.
A controversy exists about the sea name, with South Korea promoting the appellation East Sea.
In general, historians who disagree with the appellation of absolutism argue that most monarchs labeled as absolutist exerted no greater power over their subjects than any other non-absolutist rulers, and these historians tend to emphasize the differences between the absolutist rhetoric of monarchs and the realities of the effective use of power by these absolute monarchs.
Various other high offices of state in the United Kingdom, Commonwealth and Republic of Ireland are prefixed with the deferential appellation of " lord " such as Lord Chancellor, Lord Privy Seal, Lord President of the Council and Lord Mayor.
Pommeau got its recognition in 1991 ; in 1997 an appellation for Domfront with 30 % pears was created.
Cheese ( see: List of French cheeses ) and wine ( see: French wine ) are also a major part of the cuisine, playing different roles both regionally and nationally with their many variations and Appellation d ' origine contrôlée ( AOC ) ( regulated appellation ) laws, ( lentils from Le Puy-en-Velay also have an AOC status ).
While French youth culture has gravitated toward fast food and American eating habits ( with an attendant rise in obesity ), the French in general have remained committed to preserving certain elements of their food culture through such activities as including programs of taste acquisition in their public schools, by the use of the appellation d ' origine contrôlée laws, and by state and European subsides to the French agricultural industry.
The appellation " Buffalo " is also now commonly applied to foods other than wings, including chicken fingers, chicken nuggets, popcorn chicken, shrimp and pizza that are seasoned with the Buffalo-style sauce or variations of it.

appellation and wording
It was not until the 2003 constitutional change that these regions are now to be called overseas regions ; indeed, the new wording of the Constitution aims to give no precedence to either appellation overseas department or overseas region, although the second one is still virtually unused by French media.

appellation and White
They finally broke into the mainstream European market with their 1977 set Gone to Earth, which contained the song " Poor Man's Moody Blues ", a homage to that band's " Nights in White Satin ", and also an appellation foisted upon Barclay James Harvest by press critics in the early 1970s.

appellation and ",
It was also ` Abdu ' l-Bahá who insisted that the appellation given to the child should be " Shoghi Effendi ", (" Effendi " signifies " Sir "), rather than simply " Shoghi ", as a mark of respect towards him.
The kanji expression is from the Chinese meaning " tiger staff ", but as to the Japanese appellation, one straightforward interpretation is that it comes from " remove pain " ( alluding to its painkilling use ), though there are other etymological explanations offered.
Its change is equal to the amount of reversible work done on, or obtainable from, a system at constant T. Thus its appellation " work content ", and the designation A from Arbeit, the German word for work.
Because it flowers in December and has a festive red and green appearance, one species has been named " Christmas bush ", an appellation shared by several Australian plants which bloom around the same time or are festively colored.
The appellation ' Lord ' is used most often by barons who are rarely addressed by their formal and legal title of " Baron ", a notable exception being during a baron's introduction into the House of Lords when he begins his oath by stating " I, Baron X ... of Y ...".
They are supposed to take their ease and remain every year for twelve days idle in the house of Agohya ( an appellation of Aditya which means " one who cannot be concealed ", therefore the Sun ).
In 1829, Sylvester Welch's Corps of Engineers was running the lines of the Allegheny Portage Railroad through Summerhill Township and they came across “… a little village which they marked on their map " Guinea ", an appellation which the Irish laborers who built the road adopted until the matter was made a subject of complaint to Fr.
In contrast to the common perception of lush tropical vegetation that goes culturally hand-in-hand with the appellation " Polynesia ", the Marquesas are remarkably dry islands.
Sejong is one of only two Korean rulers posthumously honored with the appellation " the Great ", the other being Gwanggaeto the Great of Goguryeo.
Burke accepted the appellation the " King of Rock ' N ' Soul ", indicating " without soul, there'd be no rock and without rock, there'd be no soul.
The similarly pronounced " Negus ", a loanword from Ethiopic languages, was up until a few decades ago the appellation of the Ethiopian head of state for several centuries / millennia.
According to The Oxford English Dictionary the word comes from the French dame-jeanne, literally " Lady Jane ", as a popular appellation.
Similarly, the authors quote a 1985 lecture by Eliyahu Rips, in which he describes the appellation selection process as taking " every possible variant that we considered reasonable ", and makes no mention of Havlin or an independent expert.
Legio XIII acquired the cognomen Gemina (" twin ", a common appellation for legions constituted from portions of others ) after being reinforced with veteran legionaries from other legions following the war against Mark Antony and the Battle of Actium.
To be considered as a " quality wine ", the wine must come from a specified region and be associated with a " geographical indication " or appellation: indeed, the technical term used in the Regulation is quality wine psr, with the " psr " standing for " produced in a specified region ".
Originally named " Rouge River ", the river's appellation was altered in the 19th century due to the printing error of a Wisconsin mapmaker.
In the United Kingdom the owner and / or manager of a public house ( pub ) is also called the " landlord / landlady ", " licensee " and often, strictly incorrectly, " publican ", the latter properly the appellation of a Roman public contractor or tax farmer.
* Despot, Greek for " lord, master ", initially an appellation for the Byzantine emperor, later the senior court title, awarded to sons and close relatives of the emperor.
León-Portilla was the first to acclaim Sahagún as the " Father of Anthropology in the New World ", an appellation which has since become a commonplace, although by no means universally held, viewpoint.

0.270 seconds.