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How to use Crowns in a sentence

Looking for sentences and phrases with the word Crowns? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
His desire to realize Henry VIII's plan to subdue French influence in Scotland and achieve the union of the Crowns became an obsession.
Crowns commonly have some length of column still attached, and holdfasts, less commonly recognized than crowns, also have some length of column attached.
This appeal turns upon the trial Judge's decision to admit that document in evidence as part of the Crowns case at the very commencement of the trial.
The Scottish version of the First Union Flag saw limited use in Scotland from 1606 to 1707, following the Union of the Crowns.
In 1603, with the Union of the Crowns, King James of Scotland also became king of England and Ireland.
The Union of the Crowns of England and Scotland under James was symbolised heraldically by combining their arms, supporters and badges.
The Union of the Crowns had begun a process that would lead to the eventual unification of the two kingdoms.
The forging of a dynastic link between the Crowns of Aragon and Castile marked the beginning of Barcelona's decline.
The first golden period was over and the players that made up the teams that won four Triple Crowns had already disbanded before the Great War.
They repeated the feat in 1978 and, in the process, became the first team to win three consecutive Triple Crowns.
Although described as a Union of Crowns, prior to the Acts of Union of 1707, the crowns of the two separate kingdoms had rested on the same head.
Although described as a Union of Crowns, until 1707 there were in fact two separate Crowns resting on the same head.
He also married Henry's daughter, Margaret Tudor, setting the stage for the Union of the Crowns.
The Union of the Crowns in 1603 expanded the personal union to include Scotland.
In 1503, he married Henry VII's daughter, Margaret Tudor, thus laying the foundation for the 17th century Union of the Crowns.
An unofficial variant used in the Kingdom of Scotland during the 17th century, following the Union of the Crowns.
In a Civil War skirmish Sydney Godolphin, the poet and Royalist MP for Helston, was shot and killed in the porch of the Three Crowns.
Various other designs for a common flag were drawn up following the union of the two Crowns in 1603, but were rarely, if ever, used.
Before this, a personal union had existed between these two countries since the 1603 Union of the Crowns under James VI of Scotland and I of England.
After the Union of the Crowns in 1603 the Scots speaking gentry had increasing contact with English speakers and began to remodel their speech on that of their English peers.
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Examples from Classical Literature
I enjoyed playing No Monster Club's Christmas gig in Bodkins and supporting Ginnels for their Crowns album launch.
She was not a conqueror of nations or a distributor of crowns, but a giver of alms.
Two other Visigothic crowns are also preserved with it in the armeria Real.
For that we must go to the Castle ruin that crowns Lewes as with a battlement.
In the Pigs and their allies the crowns are bunodont, while in the more highly specialised Ruminants the crowns are selenodont.
And in this way the cabinetmaker, to whom Malaga owed a hundred crowns, was paid.
Were his crowns to be only the thornless, characterless ones that went with his profession?
Who crowns his bust with laurels, or celebrates his birthday and his deathday with solemn festivals and pompous panegyrics?
The teeth are markedly heterodont and diphyodont, and the molars have broad crowns with tuberculated or ridged surfaces.
The archbishop of Paris, subsequently followed and stoned, is the donator of 100,000 crowns to the hospital of the Htel-Dieu.
Why, you'd be Lady Casselthorpe, with dukes and counts takin' off their crowns to you.
The absolutists on the other hand hoped that the king might by procrastination avoid the separation of the crowns.
Panurge then, without any more ado, threw a large leathern purse stuffed with gold crowns among them.
The continuous fillet which crowns the epistyle, representative of the wall-plate of the original timbered Doric construction.
The frumenty pot welcomes home the harvest cart, and the garland of flowers crowns the Captain of the reapers.
And his love is a poem, an idyl that crowns him a Shepherd King in his own green pastures.
So saying, he skewed me in an off-hand way a bill of exchange on Rome for three thousand crowns.
If he moved without light he was likely to stumble, and heydey to his fifty crowns, not to say his liberty for many days to come.
The Powers wish to compromise, but Leopold objects, and refuses to relax his grasp of Limburg until the crowns are paid.
We've got to mediatise all this stuff, all these little crowns and boundaries and creeds, and so on, that stand in the way.
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