Right-winger Goudie and full back Bertram scored the goals for Great Britain. |
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As a reward she is allowed to choose her husband and names Bertram, who unwillingly obeys the king's order to wed her. |
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He laughed and he bullyragged the boy until Bertram shouted the correct answer. |
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With longish, mousy brown hair and thick glasses, Bertram is bookish, a sharp contrast to the less formal, hip Poirier. |
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Helena, played by Janet Moran, is a lowly physician's daughter who has her eye on her high-born master, Bertram, Count of Roussillon. |
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Most Bertram 31s were powered by two 330-hp Mercury Marine inboard engines. |
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He asked polite questions for a few minutes until his faithful steward Bertram brought tea and frosted cakes. |
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And Bertram, full of the most charisma and promise as a youth, ends his days as a minor and mildly eccentric academic. |
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The Bertram 31 and its prototype were designed with a remarkable 23-degree angle of deadrise at the transom with three lifting strakes on each side from the keel to the chine. |
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Mr Rushworth sues Maria for divorce, and the proud Bertram family is devastated. |
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Mrs Norris keeps up a strict difference between her Bertram nieces and lowly Fanny. |
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It is inscribed with a note that it was engraved and done entirely by Bertram. |
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Bertram had on several occasions adopted variant readings and hypotheses unknown before Camden. |
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A passage in Bertram was credited in 1853 by Arthur Hussey as originating the name of the Pennines. |
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This seems to have been granted, although students were generally required to adhere to the Danish Church and Bertram remained Anglican. |
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In 1746, Bertram composed a letter to the English antiquarian William Stukeley on Gram's recommendation. |
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Bertram was succeeded as the naval academy's English teacher by the Swedish Carl Mannercrantz. |
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Conan Doyle stayed at the former Duchy Hotel whilst writing and researching the story with his friend, Bertram Fletcher Robinson. |
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Bertram was first elected to the Prince Edward Island Legislative Assembly in September 2003 to represent District 17, Crapaud Hazel Grove. |
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He found that the derivation from Bertram was widely believed and considered uncomfortable. |
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Bertram de Gordon, standing on the castle wall, levelled a quarrel out of a crossbow. |
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Bertram Pegram to produce a model for the Lions that were placed around the base of the dome. |
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As children, Beatrix and Bertram had numerous small animals as pets which they observed closely and drew endlessly. |
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Bertram claimed to have borrowed the text from a friend who admitted he had come by it as an act of theft from an English library. |
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In chapter 21, the slave trade is briefly mentioned as a failed topic of conversation upon the return of Sir Thomas Bertram to his home and family. |
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Instead, Bertram always provided credible reasons why the actual document could not be made available and provided copies to satisfy each new request for information. |
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Potter threatens to cut her daughter off, Beatrix reminds them of her brother, Bertram, who married a wine merchant's daughter and was not disowned. |
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Bertram fully adopted the suggestion and published his account under the name Ricardus Corinensis, from the archaic Latin form of Cirencester's name. |
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In overall command was British Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay, who had served as Flag officer at Dover during the Dunkirk evacuation four years earlier. |
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In fact, he found repeated comparisons going back at least as early as Camden, many of whose placenames and ideas Bertram incorporated into his work. |
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The overall commander of the Allied Naval Expeditionary Force, providing close protection and bombardment at the beaches, was Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay. |
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Reynolds had been skeptical of the quality of Richard of Cirencester's information, but did not express any doubts about Bertram or the validity of the manuscript. |
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In the lawsuit, Bertram alleged that Visions misclassified the exotic dancers as independent contractors so it wouldn't have to pay them minimum wage. |
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Tom Bertram incurs a large debt and to pay it, Sir Thomas sells the living of the parsonage, freed up by the death of Uncle Norris, to clergyman Dr Grant. |
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Bertram is certainly well off for a cadet of even a Baronet's family. By the time he is four or five and twenty he will have seven hundred a year, and nothing to do for it. |
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