Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Charge (heraldry)" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Woodcock and some
During the cold British winter of 1962-3, starving Woodcock were found feeding in urban areas and some were even forced to eat bird seed.
Woodcock returned to America, and Karl found private consolation some years later with the technical director of the royal theater, Wilhelm George.
" Woodcock goes so far as to enumerate the ordinaries thus: " The first Honourable Ordinary is the cross ," the second is the chief, the third is the pale, the fourth is the bend, the fifth is the fess, the sixth is the inescutcheon, the seventh is the chevron, the eighth is the saltire, and the ninth is the bar, while stating that " some writers " prefer the bordure as the ninth ordinary.

Woodcock and on
Anarchist historian George Woodcock reports the incident in which the important Italian social anarchist Errico Malatesta became involved " in a dispute with the individualist anarchists of Paterson, who insisted that anarchism implied no organization at all, and that every man must act solely on his impulses.
Reflecting on his stated motivations, Woodcock wrote that Huxley had realised the ways to enlightenment were many, and prayer and meditation were techniques among others.
More recently, Vittorio Emanuele was arrested on June 16, 2006, following an investigation started by Henry John Woodcock of the Public Prosecutor's Office in Potenza, Italy, on charges of criminal association, corruption and exploitation of prostitution.
John Woodcock and family established a small settlement in North Attleborough in 1669, which subsisted on agriculture, fishing and hunting.
Though his family was quite poor, Woodcock had the opportunity to go to Oxford University on a partial scholarship ; however, he turned down the chance, because he would have had to become a member of the clergy.
Woodcock spent World War II working on a farm, as a conscientious objector.
* George Woodcock, " Possessing the Land: Notes on Canadian Fiction ," in The Canadian Imagination: Dimensions of a Literary Culture, ed.
Early on 5 April 1932, the horse's strapper for the North American visit, Tommy Woodcock, found him in severe pain and having a high temperature.
Said Dr. Putt ," Unless we are prepared to say that Tommy Woodcock was a downright liar, which even today, decades after the loveable and respected horseman's death, would ostracise us with the Australian racing public, we must accept him on his word ," Dr Putt says.
For anarchist historian George Woodcock " the modern pacifist anarchists ,... have tended to concentrate their attention largely on the creation of libertarian communities -- particularly farming communities -- within present society, as a kind of peaceful version of the propaganda by deed.
The party was reduced to three seats on the city school board and two on the parks board, newcomer Spencer Herbert ( who was elected an NDP MLA in Vancouver-Burrard at a by-election in 2008 ), and Loretta Woodcock.
Eurasian Woodcock nest on the ground in low cover in woodland or tall heather.
In 1821 William Bingley described a method of trapping Eurasian Woodcock formerly used in northern England: " Long parallel rows of stones or stick, four or five inches high, were made in moonlight nights on the commons frequented by them.
In Nicolas Freeling's Kitchen Book he narrates the lavish dinner described in Kipling's Sea Constables, which features Woodcock as a Savoury, and explains that ' the woodcock has no gall, and is not cleaned [...] the creamy inside parts are spread on toast [...] no Edwardian gentleman would have resisted this for one minute.
It used to be thought that Eurasian Woodcock flew to the moon during the months when they were not seen and the first full moon in November, when large numbers arrive on the British coast, is sometimes described as the ' woodcock moon '.
Due to ongoing habitat loss and limited range, the Moluccan Woodcock is evaluated as Endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
In a letter to George Woodcock on 28 September 1946, Orwell noted that there were two or three books he was ashamed of and called A Clergyman's Daughter an even worse one than Keep the Aspidistra Flying and said " it was written simply as an exercise and I oughtn't to have published it, but I was desperate for money ".
Less than a month after his punishing fight against Lesnevich, Mills fought British heavyweight Bruce Woodcock, losing a twelve-round fight on points after being knocked down in the fourth.
Image: Scotch Woodcock. jpg | Scotch woodcock, scrambled eggs on toast garnished with anchovy fillets and parsley
He famously celebrated his 70th birthday by hosting an evening show in front of 2000 paying " guests " at the Royal Albert Hall, with appearances on stage by old friends such as fellow TMS commentator Jonathan Agnew, who narrated the event live, West Indian commentator Tony Cozier, TV personality Stephen Fry, cricket journalist John Woodcock, TV celebrity Christine Hamilton and his elder brother, former High Court Judge Sir John Blofeld.
It was during his time at the helm of the UAW that Woodcock appeared on Nixon's enemies list at # 9, with the annotation " No comments necessary ".

Woodcock and stating
The September-October 1942 issue of PR carried Orwell's reply to letters sent in by D. S. Savage, George Woodcock, and Alex Comfort in response to his " London Letter " of the March-April issue, in which he criticized " left-wing defeatism " and " turn-the-other-cheek " pacifists, stating that they were " objectively pro-Fascist ".

Woodcock and earlier
In the epilogue to his novel The Devils of Loudon published earlier that year, Huxley had written that drugs were “ toxic short cuts to self-transcendence ” For the Canadian writer George Woodcock, Huxley had changed his opinion because mescaline was not addictive and appeared to be without unpleasant physical or mental side-effects, further he had found that hypnosis, autohypnosis and meditation had apparently failed to produce the results he wanted.

Woodcock and writers
The Woodcock Fund, which began in 1989, provides financial assistance to writers in mid-book-project who face an unforeseen financial need that threatens the completion of their book.
The Woodcock Fund program is administered by the Writers ’ Trust of Canada and has distributed $ 887, 273 to 180 Canadian writers, as of March 2012.
The success of TISH, which the editors mailed free of charge for nineteen successive months to poets, editors, and critics across Canada and much of the US, brought Davey to the attention of the senior Canadian writers George Woodcock and Louis Dudek.
As well, the organization funds scholarships for the Humber College School for Writers Correspondence Program ; an annual Margaret Laurence Memorial Lecture, given by a noted Canadian writer ; four annual writers ' residencies at Berton House in Dawson City, Yukon ; and the Woodcock Fund, which provides emergency financial assistance to Canadian writers, named in memory of the Canadian poet George Woodcock.
Established in 1989 by George Woodcock and his wife Ingeborg, the Woodcock Fund provides emergency funding to professional Canadian writers mid-project who are facing an unforeseen financial need that threatens the completion of their book, and who lack the resources to meet that situation.
Since 1989, the Woodcock Fund has given to 182 writers ; from 2010-2011 alone, the Fund distributed to 11 different authors.

Woodcock and such
In areas sprayed during the 1950s local people observed birds such as the American Woodcock, American Robin, White-breasted Nuthatch, Brown Creeper and various Poecile species dying.
However – at least in modern heraldry texts, such as Friar and Woodcock & Robinson ( see below ) – the fylfot differs somewhat from the archetypal form of the swastika: always upright and typically with truncated limbs, as shown in the figure at right.
John Woodcock wrote in The Cricketer, " Not since Bradman's day could anyone recall having seen an English attack treated in such cavalier style.
Woodcock struggled to focus on his plans for taxes and the economy such as combining the positions of registered nurse and dental hygienist, and imposing punitive " tax flourishes " upon small business owners, which Republicans believed would resonate harder with voters.
In a clinical setting, learning disabilities are generally diagnosed through a comparison of intelligence scores and scores on an achievement test, such as the Woodcock Johnson III or Wechsler Individual Achievement Test II.

Woodcock and Leigh
Many of Maine's judges, legal scholars, politicians and community leaders graduated from the law school, including the Chief Justices of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, Leigh Saufley and Daniel Wathen, state Attorney General G. Steven Rowe, State Senate President Libby Mitchell, U. S. District Court Judge John A. Woodcock, former Governor John McKernan and the U. S. Attorney for the District of Maine, Paula D. Silsby.

Woodcock and while
The flight is somewhat owl-or bat-like ; Woodcock fly fast and direct while migrating or crossing open country, but fly erratically with twisting and fluttering once in woodland.
Finding himself surrounded, he led his men in a charge through the enemy and reached a stream, where he and a private ( Thomas Woodcock ) covered his party while they crossed unscathed, before crossing themselves under a shower of bullets.

Woodcock and later
Woodcock later wrote The Crystal Spirit ( 1966 ), a critical study of Orwell and his work which won a Governor General's Award.
He seemed to be a pawn in a power struggle between England and Real Madrid, with Greenwood later explaining that he was unable to call up Cunningham due to the late scheduling of the Spanish Cup Final – although Tony Woodcock ( then of 1.
He was later adopted by a wealthy family living near Yonge Street and Lawrence Avenue, who paid for a private school education, therapy and bikes for Woodcock.

0.448 seconds.