The entry into these sections was filmed for the TV series Extreme Archaeology. |
|
If the debt was not fully paid within the statutory period, the entry will remain for six full years. |
|
In 2003 the University of Nottingham opened a graduate entry medical school based at Royal Derby Hospital. |
|
The following year's competition had an increased entry with eight groups of four teams. |
|
With a reduction from nine professional clubs to just five, there was no Welsh entry in that year's competition. |
|
There are two ground entry doors that align with the doors on the side of the Skylon payload bay to allow easy ground access to the cabin. |
|
Formerly a major port of entry from Great Britain, from 1821 to 1920 it was named Kingstown. |
|
The majority of these festivals are free, although bookings and or entry fees may be payable for some events. |
|
Marine pollution is a generic term for the harmful entry into the ocean of chemicals or particles. |
|
He was denied entry into the United States after his conviction in 1952, but was free to visit other European countries. |
|
During Craxi's government, the economy recovered and Italy became the world's fifth largest industrial nation, gaining entry into the G7 Group. |
|
Stephenson's entry was Rocket, and its performance in winning the contest made it famous. |
|
The individual was an Albanian who had been refused entry to the United Kingdom and was voluntarily returning to Brussels. |
|
Additionally, it's up to you to remember to remove this cron entry when you've debugged the firewall. |
|
Sacred areas taboo from human entry to fishing and hunting are known by many ancient cultures worldwide. |
|
At the bow and the stern builders were able to create hollow sections, or compound bends, at the waterline, making the entry point very fine. |
|
The Abbasids used Alexandria, Damietta, Aden and Siraf as entry ports to India and China. |
|
The entry of harmful foreign pollutants by the way of trade routes has been a cause of alarm during the modern times. |
|
The consequences transformed the balance of power in East Asia, resulting in a reassessment of Japan's recent entry onto the world stage. |
|
After a tank is cleaned, provided that it is going to be prepared for entry, it will be purged. |
|
|
As of 2016 In 2012, Bangladesh denied entry to further refugees after another spate of sectarian riots broke out in Rakhine State. |
|
Computers have made an entry into education in the past decades and have brought significant benefits to teachers and students alike. |
|
The entry examination consisted of writing out the Lord's Prayer and jumping naked over a chair. |
|
De Lambert got as far as establishing a base at Wissant, near Calais, but Seymour did nothing beyond submitting his entry to the Daily Mail. |
|
Once they crossed the seawall, they were confronted by a series of tank obstacles that prevented their entry into the town. |
|
Certain Arab nations, such as Syria, also protested against the entry of MDA into the Red Cross movement, making consensus impossible for a time. |
|
Gates are sometimes installed at cave entrances to limit human entry into caves with sensitive or endangered bat species. |
|
As a violation of a State's immigration laws a person who is declared to be an economic migrant can be refused entry into a country. |
|
Information about the 1497 voyage comes mostly from four short letters and an entry in a 1565 chronicle of the city of Bristol. |
|
The lights flashed, the crowds sang,... bells peeled, bombs thundered,... and the new Century made its triumphant entry. |
|
Falconry made its entry to Europe only after AD 400, brought in from the East after invasions by the Huns and Allans. |
|
Due to safety reasons, right of entry is only given when the army ranges are not in operation. |
|
Crocodiles have a palatal flap, a rigid tissue at the back of the mouth that blocks the entry of water. |
|
Gregory's entry in the Liber Pontificalis is short and of little use, but he himself was a writer whose work sheds light on the mission. |
|
Some marathon organizers set aside a portion their limited entry slots for charity organizations to sell to members in exchange for donations. |
|
The milker stands near the entry to the parlor and puts the cups on the cows as they move past. |
|
The modern structures face the Thames and include an entry way that displays More's arms, heraldic beasts, and a Latin maxim. |
|
Other problems include state ownership and interference, which impose high barriers to entry in many areas. |
|
He returned home but was refused entry to the reserve because he was not Aboriginal. |
|
The election also saw the entry into the state parliament for the first time of the leftist The Left party. |
|
|
His entry into government provided Posidonius with powerful connections to facilitate his travels to far away places, even beyond Roman control. |
|
Marius relaxed the recruitment policies by removing the necessity to own land, and allowed all Roman citizens entry, regardless of social class. |
|
These schools are often heavily oversubscribed, and award places in rank order of performance in their entry tests. |
|
Octavian could not rely on his limited funds to make a successful entry into the upper echelons of the Roman political hierarchy. |
|
These schools used entry assessments and selected academic students from across the Realm of New Zealand. |
|
After cellular entry, HCV RNA is decapsidated and used both for polyprotein translation and RNA replication in the cytoplasm. |
|
This qualification is the traditional route of entry into third level education. |
|
Another, the Peterborough Chronicle, is in Old English except for the last entry, which is in early Middle English. |
|
Halting before the entry way, he kept all from entering or leaving all night, which occurred every night until the rye was cut. |
|
In business, economics, and finance, double entry bookkeeping, credit card, and the charge card were all first used in the West. |
|
While a few organisms can grow at the initial site of entry, many migrate and cause systemic infection in different organs. |
|
His Bencao Gangmu is a medical text with 1,892 entries, each entry with its own name called a gang. |
|
The Taizong Shilu 23 October, 1407, entry recorded that the Yongle Emperor summoned the Javanese ambassadors. |
|
The Taizong Shilu 14 May 1421 entry recorded that the treasure voyages were temporary suspended. |
|
As in Melilla, Ceuta is attractive to migrants who try to use it as an entry to Europe. |
|
It had a monopoly on commercial banking until a change in the banking law in 2003 led to the entry of several other banks. |
|
For students, restrictions on entry should be dropped, and more opportunity given to poorer families. |
|
Many people objected to the government allowing entry to so many economic refugees. |
|
These developments allowed the entry of chartered companies into the East Indies. |
|
Veracruz was also the main port of entry in mainland New Spain for European goods, immigrants, and African slaves. |
|
|
The life cycle of poxviruses is complicated by having multiple infectious forms, with differing mechanisms of cell entry. |
|
Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday and Good Friday respectively commemorate Jesus' entry in Jerusalem, the Last Supper and the Crucifixion. |
|
The high sides formed a sort of box in which seats were placed, with a notch on each side for entry. |
|
Forcing entry into the ship, they found the bodies of Willoughby and his men frozen solid. |
|
An example can be seen in the entry for 829, which describes Egbert's invasion of Northumbria. |
|
Visitors to the website are able to look up a place name and see the index entry made for the manor, town, city or village. |
|
False Dmitri was married per procura to Marina Mniszech, and immediately after Godunov's death in 1605, he made his triumphal entry into Moscow. |
|
Windsor Castle is noted in the Domesday Book under the entry for Clewer, the neighbouring manor to Windsor. |
|
Other pest and diseases can gain entry through the physical damage caused by gall formation, leading to rots. |
|
Its entry was surely facilitated by Thynne's inclusion of Thomas Usk's Testament of Love in the first edition. |
|
The most notable change was the inclusion of the date of the first known citation of each word, to document its entry into the English language. |
|
Cambodia was to have joined at the same time as Laos and Burma, but its entry was delayed due to the country's internal political struggle. |
|
The earliest such piece of criticism was a 1662 entry in the diary of Samuel Pepys. |
|
Further, reasonable notice of a contract's terms must be given to the other party prior to their entry into the contract. |
|
The longest entry in the OED2 was for the verb set, which required 60,000 words to describe some 430 senses. |
|
Also in this year he began his association with Sidney Godolphin, and through him ultimate entry into the circle around Princess Anne. |
|
Additionally, the entry of several states into the Union was delayed due to distinctive complicating factors. |
|
Since the early 19th century, New York City has been the largest port of entry for legal immigration into the United States. |
|
In 1886 measures were adopted to restrict Indian entry into the civil service. |
|
The winning entry was a song written by Professor Solomon Mutswairo and composed by Fred Changundega. |
|
|
The headword of each entry was no longer capitalized, allowing the user to readily see those words that actually require a capital letter. |
|
Lloyd Webber accepted the challenge of managing the UK's entry for the 2009 Eurovision Song Contest, to be held in Moscow. |
|
Her family also served as a conduit for the entry of English nobles into Scotland. |
|
The winning entry was a poem written in Asturian, one of the first such in Asturian literature. |
|
The term undershot can refer to any wheel where the water passes under the wheel but it usually implies that the water entry is low on the wheel. |
|
Some of the barriers to entry for entrepreneurs are the economy, debt from schooling, and the challenges of regulatory compliance. |
|
However, the second entry was adapted and conducted by William Ross due to Williams's conflicting commitments. |
|
Whilst many have an entry charge, more than 250 properties are free to enter including Maiden Castle, Dorset and St Catherine's Oratory. |
|
Its collection belongs to the public of the United Kingdom and entry to the main collection is free of charge. |
|
On the feetfirst top-top with a 19-inch hole, your body is tilted to about a 35-degree angle on entry. |
|
On the ground floor is the Final Whilstle bar where no ticket is required for entry. |
|
An entry in the Edinburgh burgh records for 19 April 1592 includes golf in a list of pastimes to be avoided on the Sabbath. |
|
Hatton was a heavy underdog for this fight and the victory announced his entry to the upper echelons of the world boxing scene. |
|
Other fences have also been reduced in height over the years, and the entry requirements for the race have been made stricter. |
|
The circuit straddles the Northamptonshire and Buckinghamshire border, with the current main circuit entry on the Buckinghamshire side. |
|
As a consequence of this the entry from Hangar Straight into Stowe Corner was modified in 1995 so as to make its entry less dangerous. |
|
Reports suggested that the couple might have been gassed through the air conditioning system prior to the burglars' entry into the building. |
|
When the 2010 entry list was released on 12 June 2009, the Litespeed Team Lotus entry was not one of those selected. |
|
While BAT bought the Formula One entry, they set up the British American Racing team in a new factory in Brackley. |
|
In 107 BC, all citizens, regardless of their wealth or social class, were made eligible for entry into the Roman army. |
|
|
Membership of the senatorial order was a prerequisite to attain positions within the cursus honorum and to gain entry into the Roman Senate. |
|
The Finnair employee leafed through the red pages, punched an entry into her computer and bent down to read the output. |
|
Applications for entry permits are, however, handled by Chinese Embassies for Hong Kong. |
|
A few weeks after the British entry into the war, the Act received Royal Assent, while the amending bill was abandoned. |
|
Such migrants may violate our laws against illicit entry, but if that's all they do then they are trespassers, not criminals. |
|
Although judges and televoters cannot vote for their own country's entry, expatriates can vote for their country of origin. |
|
With their entry into new high-tech industries, many nerds suddenly became millionerds. |
|
Although the entry mentions Cynric as Cerdic's son, a different source lists him as the son of Cerdic's son, Creoda. |
|
Since the entry of France and Spain into the war, the British lacked the necessary ships to match their opponents' every move. |
|
Allied and Russian forces were revived only temporarily by Romania's entry into the war on 27 August. |
|
In January 1917, Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare, realizing it would mean American entry. |
|
The General Staff blocked the entry of Douhet's theory into doctrine, fearing revenge strikes against German civilians and cities. |
|
Providenciales International Airport is the main entry point for the Turks and Caicos Islands. |
|
Children under 16 require a completed entry clearance application to visit the island. |
|
Further, both genes were separated by an internal ribosome entry site for bicistronicity. |
|
Security is the principal basis for Qatar's strict entry and immigration rules and regulations. |
|
Airbus suspended work on the freighter version, but said it remained on offer, albeit without a service entry date. |
|
Drafted by the military in World War II, it experienced a similar late entry into the civilian airline industry. |
|
Further evidence is the entry of one Sihtric dux in three of Cnut's charters. |
|
Nine years after the entry into force of the directive, a management plan must be produced for each river basin district. |
|
|
Folioing is necessary as an indication how far in his work the poster has proceeded, and must be done in both books immediately after each entry. |
|
He calculated a date of 7,300 BC for the entry of this lineage into Ireland. |
|
It really bothered him to be one of the first musicians who had to play for the Russians after the entry of the fraternalized armies into Prague. |
|
Gibraltar became a critical naval base and allowed Britain to control the Atlantic entry and exit point to the Mediterranean. |
|
Pitt's entry into parliament is somewhat ironic as he later railed against the very same pocket and rotten boroughs that had given him his seat. |
|
Good deeds, such as charity, prayer and compassion towards animals, will be rewarded with entry to heaven. |
|
The EEA was established on 1 January 1994 upon entry into force of the EEA Agreement. |
|
A child's age on 1 September determines the point of entry into the relevant stage of education. |
|
A child's age on 1 July determines the point of entry into the relevant stage of education, unlike England and Wales where it is 1 September. |
|
In her own contemporaneous diary entry dated 15 January 1993, Fraser described herself more as Pinter's literary midwife. |
|
Equal status with the main Allied Powers was one of the primary conditions for Romania's entry into the War. |
|
Romania's entry into the War in August 1916 provoked major changes for the Germans. |
|
Higher-end entry doors come with multipoint locking systems that secure two or more sides of the door to the frame. |
|
Bill came back to town for American Thanksgiving, and we spent the day tracking down the required entry visas. |
|
As only a few entrance doors were opened, a bottleneck situation ensued with thousands trying to gain entry, and the crush became deadly. |
|
Two wings of the Boiler House are used to stage the major temporary exhibitions for which an entry fee is charged. |
|
He went for a walk the next afternoon, and wrote his last entry that day, 27 April. |
|
Ireland have been granted automatic entry to the tournament due to their strong showing in the 2008 World Cup. |
|
Each function has an entry address which must be quoted after the USR keyword. |
|
Mozambique's controversial entry led to the Edinburgh Declaration and the current membership guidelines. |
|
|
This incident really brings home the whole question of access, the point of entry for people into observing or seeing art at that kind of level. |
|
Governments may forbid unauthorized entry or exit to border zones and restrict property ownership in the area. |
|
The zones function as buffer zones specifically monitored by border patrols in order to prevent illegal entry or exit. |
|
After the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon in 2009 the pillar structure ceased to exist. |
|
Immigrants have also arrived as legitimate Eurostar passengers without proper entry papers. |
|
For immigration control, officials of many countries use entry and exit stamps. |
|
The header includes an index, an identifier, and a pointer to the next entry. |
|
In other countries, a stamp activates or acknowledges the continuing leave conferred in the passport bearer's entry clearance. |
|
In each instance, a visa is subject to entry permission by an immigration official at the time of actual entry, and can be revoked at any time. |
|
The possession of a visa is not in itself a guarantee of entry into the country that issued it, and a visa can be revoked at any time. |
|
The visa validity then indicates the time period when entry is permitted into the country. |
|
It was introduced in 1973, in consequence of Britain's entry to the European Economic Community, at a standard rate of 10 percent. |
|
Despite the name, a visa run is usually done with a passport that can be used for an entry without a visa. |
|
In particular, he cited fluctuations in house prices as a barrier to immediate entry. |
|
The Lotus name returned to Formula One for the 2010 season, when a new Malaysian team called Lotus Racing was awarded an entry. |
|
Some countries that allow visa on arrival do so only at a limited number of entry points. |
|
Possession of a valid visa is a condition for entry into many countries, and exemption schemes exist. |
|
Normally, visas are valid for entry only into the country which issued the visa. |
|
Some countries, including the Czech Republic, require that an alien who needs a visa on entry be in possession of a valid visa upon exit. |
|
In the 1999, Ford decided that Jaguar would be the corporation's Formula One entry. |
|
|
The country's customs is obliged to accept the agency's report for the purpose of assessing duties and taxes at the port of entry. |
|
All goods entering the United States are subject to inspection by CBP prior to legal entry. |
|
Legal acts setting out the conditions for entry into the Schengen Area are now made by majority vote in the EU's legislative bodies. |
|
This is the return of apprehended Mexicans to remote locations by Border Patrol rather than the nearest Mexican port of entry. |
|
About 300,000 visitors cross by foot or car from the San Ysidro point of entry in the United States every day. |
|
Judges and other judicial officials are appointed after passing entry exams. |
|
This was Bentley's first official entry in a British race since the 1930 RAC Tourist Trophy. |
|
It was common for surgeons to have no formal medical education, and no diploma or entry examination was required. |
|
He originally intended to retire at the end of 1882, the fiftieth anniversary of his entry into politics, but in the event did not do so. |
|
As part of the deal for British entry, France agreed to allow the EEC its own monetary resources. |
|
Smith defied the Labour whips in 1971, joining Labour MPs led by Roy Jenkins who voted in favour of entry to the European Economic Community. |
|
Major air combat during the war in the Pacific began with the entry of the Western Allies following Japan's attack against Pearl Harbor. |
|
These timeframes also encompass the peak period of service entry for such aircraft. |
|
This was later revised to higher level for entry to university and lower for banking insurance and business. |
|
It is located on the banks of the River Ribble, close to its entry into the Irish Sea. |
|
Since 1999, the band has gained attention in Canada, following Nova Scotian singer Bruce Guthro's entry to the band. |
|
On 6 July 2005, Prestwick Airport became the entry point for the participants in the 31st G8 summit held in Gleneagles. |
|
Marine pollution is a generic term for the entry into the ocean of potentially hazardous chemicals or particles. |
|
Pretending to be carpenters repairing the castle, the two gained entry, killed the two watchmen on duty and took control of the fortress. |
|
Such firms can temporarily drop prices and accept losses to prevent competition from entering the market, and then raise them again once the threat of entry is reduced. |
|
|
In the British Museum there is an entry of a warrant, granted to Nicholas Spicer, authorising him to impress smiths for making two thousand Welch bills or glaives. |
|
Dorothy's journal entry beautifully captures this new, holistic perspective as a process, offering us a glimpse of not just a poet but an ecopoet at work. |
|
One common path of entry by contaminants to the sea are rivers. |
|
Fustian, of which I have found only one entry before 1401, occurs frequently in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It appears to have been a ribbed cloth. |
|
It is one thing to see an intercooler as a simple entry in a textbook, but to witness the actual hardware as it crawled down the road was awe-inspiring. |
|
Its judges were increasingly able to control entry to their own ranks. |
|
That policy is a holdover from days of punch card data entry. |
|
This last entry is in Middle English, rather than Old English. |
|
A quick look at the underwater profile reveals a deep forefoot and fine entry at the bow that virtually eliminates pounding and helps to reduce hull splash noise. |
|
This entry had been written by the antiquarian and writer John Aubrey, who privately made many notes about Avebury and other prehistoric monuments which remained unpublished. |
|
Thus, ileus also has potential detrimental effects in sterile peritonitis by providing a source and mechanism for entry of bacteria into the peritoneal cavity. |
|
An entry in the Annals of Clonmacnoise, recording the death in 934 of a ruler who was possibly Ealdred of Bamburgh, suggests another possible explanation. |
|
Galleys from Kaffa reached Genoa and Venice in January 1348, but it was the outbreak in Pisa a few weeks later that was the entry point to northern Italy. |
|
To his dismay, he was rebuffed by the town's Parliamentary governor, Sir John Hotham, who refused him entry in April, and Charles was forced to withdraw. |
|
Maybe I'll buy another horse with an entry in the Irish Derby. |
|
Upon the entry into force of the Maastricht Treaty in 1993, the EEC was renamed the European Community to reflect that it covered a wider range than economic policy. |
|
Professional basketball came to the city in 2007 with the entry of Everton Tigers, now known as Mersey Tigers, into the elite British Basketball League. |
|
A new junction, 31A, which has only a northbound exit and a southbound entry, was opened in 1997 to serve a new business park close to the motorway. |
|
Gravesend on the opposite shore had long been a port of entry for shipping, all of which had used the river itself for loading and unloading of cargo and passengers. |
|
Although grammar schools are rare, some of them are highly selective and state funded boarding schools require substantial fees, which may introduce further barriers to entry. |
|
|
Other degrees, such as Bachelor of Arts don't necessarily elicit entry into a profession, though many organisations require a bachelor's degree for employment. |
|
Pupils are highly successful in public examinations, and the record of entrance to universities with demanding entry requirements in the United Kingdom and overseas is strong. |
|
There is also an entry of two hundred Malles in a store house at Berwick. |
|
Although the heavy capital investment in horse and armor was a barrier to entry, knighthood became known as a way for serfs to earn their freedom. |
|
During the Leveson Inquiry she gave evidence under the name of Joanne Kathleen Rowling and her entry in Who's Who lists her name also as Joanne Kathleen Rowling. |
|
The work begins quietly, with instrumental and solo movements preceding the first appearance of the chorus, whose entry in the low alto register is muted. |
|
The festival was not hit by extreme weather, but high winds on the Wednesday delayed entry, and steady rain throughout Saturday turned some areas of the site to mud. |
|
It is likely that he would have gained entry if he had applied for it. |
|
The Hampden Park crowd was officially recorded as 149,415, though the true figure is unknown as a large number of additional fans gained unauthorised entry. |
|
The archive of the League of Nations was transferred to the United Nations Office at Geneva and is now an entry in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register. |
|
Under this point of view, definiteness does not play a role in the selection of a definite article more than the lexical entry attached to the article. |
|
Hong Kong maintains an international border with PR China across 5 border control stations by land, 3 entry and exit points by sea and the International Airport. |
|
Visa requirements for British citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of the United Kingdom. |
|
After French entry into the war, the British turned their attention to the southern colonies, where they hoped to regain control by recruiting large numbers of Loyalists. |
|
In general, a UK visa will not allow entry to Ireland nor vice versa. |
|
One widely cited opinion is that the Big Three's historical reputation within the financial industry creates a high barrier of entry for new entrants. |
|
At the latest twelve years after the date of entry into force of the Directive, the European Commission has to publish a report on the implementation of the Directive. |
|
Until recently, women were allowed entry only one day in the year. |
|
At least the entry set of Stately Wayne Manor was tweaked slightly to make it more moviesque. And the cast visits the real house for the only time. |
|
As a consequence Indian languages were changed greatly, with the large scale entry of Persian and its many Arabic loans into the Gujarati lexicon. |
|
|
Slater persuaded Fleming's mother to remove him from Eton a term early for a crammer course to gain entry to the Royal Military College at Sandhurst. |
|
He applied for entry to the Foreign Office, but failed the examinations. |
|
MacDiarmid listed Anglophobia among his hobbies in his Who's Who entry. |
|
A Schengen visa must be multiple entry to allow returning to Norway. |
|
For example, an entry check for an Annex II national takes around 15 seconds on average in Greece, whilst it takes three to five minutes on average in Slovakia. |
|
A Schengen visa or a visa exemption does not entitle the traveller to enter the Schengen area, but rather allows the traveller to seek entry at the port. |
|
Many countries normally allow entry to holders of passports of other countries, sometimes requiring a visa also to be obtained, but this is not an automatic right. |
|
Such documents are not necessarily accepted for entry into a country. |
|
For example, in the United Kingdom, an immigration stamp in a passport includes the formal leave to enter granted to a person subject to entry control. |
|
Even having a visa does not guarantee entry to the host country. |
|
In general, an applicant may be refused a visa if he or she does not meet the requirements for admission or entry under that country's immigration laws. |
|
Even if a traveler does not need a visa, the aforementioned criteria can also be used by border police to refuse the traveler entry into the country in question. |
|
Legal forms of identification are used mainly for buying alcohol and cigarettes where the purchaser looks younger than 25 and entry to nightclubs. |
|
Located on the border with Russia, it is major land port of entry. |
|
The UCAS tariff of valuing qualifications for university entry has increased its scores for Advanced Highers at A, B and C in comparison to the past. |
|
An entry in the Annales Cambriae concerning the death of King Cadell ap Brochfael says that the land later called Powys was originally known as Teyrnllwg. |
|
The winning entry was unveiled on 2 April 2008, designed by Matthew Dent. |
|
At the end of the 2005 Super League season, an extra team was relegated to National League One in order to accommodate French side Catalans Dragons' entry to the competition. |
|
They also have tried to enlist support from the National Cattlemen's Association, on grounds this open-door policy could lead to easier entry for foreign beef. |
|
Motorways status is signaled at the entry and exit of the motorway by a symbol conforming to international agreements, but specific to each country. |
|
|
As a final touch, each wagoner tied a fine new cracker to his whip to outcrack his comrades as they dashed around the Plaza in a hilarious, triumphal entry. |
|
Mucking requires protocols for entry into confined spaces, protective clothing, designated safety observers, and possibly the use of airline respirators. |
|
A wildly overscale concrete canopy juts over the main entry plaza. |
|
The entry of CFCs into the ocean makes them extremely useful as transient tracers to estimate rates and pathways of ocean circulation and mixing processes. |
|
The RORC in 2007 set an entry limit of 300 boats for the first time. |
|
In 1939 the party split over the entry of the Union into World War II as an ally of the United Kingdom, a move which the National Party followers strongly opposed. |
|
After the Gothic entry to the steppe, many of the Alans seem to have retreated eastwards towards the Don, where they seem to have established contacts with the Huns. |
|
On his entry to Rome, Trajan granted the plebs a direct gift of money. |
|
Most of this article, including quotations unless otherwise noted, has been adapted from Stephen's entry on Edward Gibbon in the Dictionary of National Biography. |
|
Russia has a free education system, which is guaranteed for all citizens by the Constitution, however entry to subsidized higher education is highly competitive. |
|
As a result of the country's entry to the European Community, much of its agricultural infrastructure has been upgraded and agricultural output increased. |
|
The biographical dictionary of Ibn Khallikan preserves the record of the Berber predominance in the invasion of 711, in the entry on Tariq ibn Ziyad. |
|
Cruz's plans to clean the city of diseases included compulsory vaccination of the entire population and forced entry into houses to kill mosquitos and rats. |
|
During the colonial era, Veracruz was the main port of entry for immigrants from Spain, African slaves, and all types of luxury goods for import and export. |
|
Svalbard Airport, Longyear provides the main point of entry and exit. |
|
On the way, Cyprus visited Japan during the height of the period of severe Japanese restrictions on the entry of foreigners, the first Australian ship to do so. |
|
Since the earliest Russian entry, Siberia was administered by voyevodas. |
|
England's entry into the war later that year led to the French capture of Calais, and French armies plundered Spanish possessions in the Low Countries. |
|
Abolition was often adopted due to political change, as when countries shifted from authoritarianism to democracy, or when it became an entry condition for the European Union. |
|
However, high prices attracted the entry of new firms into the industry. |
|
|
Trespassing is unlawful entry onto the real property of another. |
|
He was in agreement with Heath's policy on the EEC, and did much to persuade doubters on the right wing of the Conservative party of the desirability of Britain's entry. |
|
De Gaulle was always strongly opposed to British entry for many reasons. |
|
Barry's entry, number 64, for which Augustus Pugin helped prepare the competition drawings, won the commission in January 1836 to design the new Palace of Westminster. |
|
Pugin also supplied drawings for the entry of James Gillespie Graham. |
|
Of these, the Georgian Ajars were the most eager to rise up against Russia, but the Ottomans also hoped for revolts in Daghestan and Azerbaijan upon entry of their troops. |
|