Metal helmets were worn by hoplites, the foot soldiers of ancient Greece, and elsewhere in eastern Mediterranean civilizations. |
|
Dormancy also occurs in summer in some perennial grasses originating from Mediterranean climates. |
|
Jalpari Chaat tandoori is a fusion of Mediterranean and Indian influences, and they have quite a few dishes that would straddle that. |
|
Indeed, few prominent Britons of Caesar's day cannot have known something of the Graeco-Roman history and culture of the Mediterranean world. |
|
The soda was imported from the eastern Mediterranean in a form called natron. |
|
It's warm to hot in the south and Corsica, but the mistral can blow fiercely in summer making Mediterranean seas too rough for diving. |
|
Reciprocity was basic to all forms of social interaction in ancient Mediterranean society. |
|
The Italians' approach is more Teutonic than Mediterranean and it was reflected on the pitch on Wednesday night against Belgium. |
|
I sat at their tables enjoying fresh wonders of the Mediterranean and learned to milk goats. |
|
And eventually a new map of Mediterranean and Eastern European politics was pieced together. |
|
Roast kid is a festive dish in Mediterranean countries, spit-roast kid being found throughout the Balkans and the Middle East. |
|
Starry smooth hounds are common throughout the entire Mediterranean over continental shelf, including Adriatic and Sea of Marmara. |
|
British submarines conducted 2,223 patrols in home waters, the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Far East. |
|
Many parts of the Mediterranean are facing an environmental crisis as wine makers stop using traditional cork stoppers for their wine bottles. |
|
In countries where people still eat the traditional Mediterranean diet there's a lower incidence of heart disease. |
|
The ragout had a distinct Mediterranean feel with roasted peppers and olives scattered in with the lightly cooked pieces of rabbit. |
|
The war being over, troops in the Mediterranean were expected to be sent home and demobilised. |
|
The region's Mediterranean style climate and annual water deficit has led to extensive calcrete development. |
|
In other areas as well, aircraft transited the Mediterranean and flew from the Pacific regions into the theater of operations. |
|
Only the Mediterranean coast has rain that is reliable enough to support marginal human activity, with some agriculture and animal husbandry. |
|
|
Shaded by two Mediterranean oaks, it is bordered along its edge by a brimming blue-glazed swimming pool that shoots off into the garden. |
|
Olive groves and forests of cork oak are the Mediterranean environment of the handsome woodchat. |
|
The water of the lake is a mixture of karst water, which is drinkable, and a little salty seawater from the nearby Mediterranean Sea. |
|
Apart from rabies, dogs are at risk of passing on Mediterranean spotted fever, leishmaniasis, heartworm, and brucellosis. |
|
French and Spanish broom are native to the Mediterranean region and Canary Islands. |
|
The harbour at Suda Bay was the largest in the Mediterranean Sea and an ideal base for naval operations. |
|
The Mediterranean was sighted for the first time and we laagered on the edge of the Sinai desert. |
|
It takes place in great modern cities, in regions, the Mediterranean region or California, of deeply hybrid cultures and economies. |
|
It would be absurd to compare that Mediterranean passion for music with our own more circumspect attachment to the arts. |
|
Janet was able to find his letters from the Mediterranean that alluded to his illness, as he asked for cough sweets to be sent to him. |
|
Socialist internationalism does not stop at the Mediterranean or a line on a map drawn by Eurocrats. |
|
We're told the Mediterranean diet is good for us, for what it does for our cardiovascular systems. |
|
You were so inspired by the Olympics that you decided to adopt a Mediterranean diet. |
|
The Mediterranean influence on the place can be felt by the cuisine that is served in its lavishly decorated restaurants. |
|
Ginkgo biloba is a highly adaptable plant that can grow in almost any temperate or Mediterranean climate. |
|
It is moderately lime resistant and quite drought resistant, and so is widely used in Mediterranean climates. |
|
So Leonardo grew up with a North African education under the Moors and later travelled extensively around the Mediterranean coast. |
|
Albania is a Mediterranean country sitting on the coast of the Adriatic and Ionian seas. |
|
The resort itself is hidden amongst lagoons, trees and plants from the Mediterranean and warmer climates such as the American Aloe or the Yucca. |
|
Sandown-class minehunter HMS Pembroke is due to return to Portsmouth today after a deployment to the Mediterranean on NATO duty. |
|
|
Water is a precious commodity on the dry east Mediterranean island, which desalinates more than a fifth of its household needs from the sea. |
|
Today's rest day on the Mediterranean coast will be even more welcome than usual. |
|
The Mediterranean cruise season is April to November when the weather is generally sunny and mild. |
|
My hotel room here is stylish, in that faded Mediterranean way I came to know so well while summering with my family in Majorca. |
|
Saline and warm Mediterranean water flowing through the Bosporus Strait maintains a permanent pycnocline. |
|
The scheme has a Mediterranean feel, with cypress, olive and palm trees, lavender borders, sunken gardens and with natural stone walls. |
|
Areas with high endemicity include the Mediterranean basin, the Middle East, Central Asia, Chile, and Argentina. |
|
My partner and I had the Mediterranean salad and the mushroom gratin to start, for main the salmon fillet and fillet of beef. |
|
The shared part of the Armenian diet is the Mediterranean foods widely familiar among Arabs, Turks, Greeks. |
|
The saltbush Atriplex halimus is a chenopodiaceous plant well adapted to dry saline habitats and widely distributed in the Mediterranean Basin. |
|
Above the 9th-floor sky lobby is an open air shaft that creates a Mediterranean climate. |
|
Before food processors and dough machines, bakers in Mediterranean palaces would shape and stretch phyllo by hand. |
|
Most cases of HIV related kala-azar have so far been reported in southern Europe along the Mediterranean basin. |
|
One of the great Mediterranean cities can now be reached with low-cost airline Jet2, by passengers flying from Yorkshire. |
|
Mastic gum is a resinous exudate obtained from the stem and leaves of the mastic tree, an evergreen shrub native to the Mediterranean Basin. |
|
After a dozen years at the latest, the two countries will both become part of the Mediterranean free trade zone. |
|
Geology, regional Mediterranean climate, and pedology are the same on both slopes. |
|
It will bring together almost all of the watercolours and sketches Mackintosh made at the picturesque Mediterranean waterfront of Port Vendres. |
|
It is clearly necessary to situate these verses within ancient Mediterranean cultural codes relating to honor and gender. |
|
The vegetation, especially the characteristic umbrella pine set before the beautiful bay, indelibly marks the Mediterranean location. |
|
|
Its business card promises a traditional Mediterranean fare of fresh vegetables, meats, wines and cheeses seasoned with southern Italian style. |
|
With fronts opening up in the Mediterranean area, the regiment was seconded to the Australian army. |
|
The resistance movement of Greece played a relatively small part in the whole scheme of events in the eastern Mediterranean during World War Two. |
|
The second is described as mixed race possibly Mediterranean around 6ft, in his late teens, with a square face and heavy build. |
|
Casablanca is the Mediterranean commercial center of Morocco, a center of tourism and French culture and internationalism. |
|
In all the hubbub over the Mediterranean diet, the foods of Turkey seem mysteriously underrepresented. |
|
A couple of weeks ago Minerva mentioned that walnuts made a Mediterranean diet even more healthy. |
|
A good example of such a diet is the Mediterranean diet, where high energy olive oil is combined with low energy fibre rich vegetables. |
|
The Axumites and the Romans became economic partners who controlled the Red Sea and Mediterranean Sea trades, respectively. |
|
Once inside, the Mediterranean exterior is reinforced by colourful paintwork and sumptuous soft furnishings. |
|
Relaxed and carefree, they fall in love with a Mediterranean resort or a fishing village in the Canaries. |
|
It stretches from the sunbelt of the Mediterranean to the land of the Lapps and it is held together by high-speed trains and low-cost airlines. |
|
Swift habitat includes desert oasis, Mediterranean scrub, steppe, farm or grassland, urban areas, forest and canyons. |
|
In the same area, H. spontaneum also occupies an array of secondary habitats, such as open Mediterranean maquis, abandoned fields, and roadsides. |
|
With Carthage defeated, the Romans became the most powerful Mediterranean state. |
|
New American cooking incorporates many ingredients from Mediterranean cuisines that are enhanced by modern Greek wines. |
|
The president announced plans to build two nuclear power stations along the Mediterranean coast. |
|
The new Mediterranean Garden is beginning to grow, and the new tree fern now has 6 fronds and more coming on. |
|
While fossils of this species do not occur in Europe, archaeological finds suggest that it periodically inhabited the Mediterranean region. |
|
In August it is crammed with holidaymakers, and all the usual paraphernalia of a Mediterranean sunspot. |
|
|
I don't burn either, which is nice, but even if I spend eight hours under the Mediterranean sun, I don't tan. |
|
Everywhere one feels the influence of the Mediterranean and particularly on the specific xerophilous flora and fauna of the region. |
|
Step inside the restaurant and you'll be transported to a Greek taverna, as the wonderful aroma of Mediterranean cooking fills the air. |
|
The rock of Gibraltar stands 450m high, dominating the narrow strait into the Mediterranean from the Atlantic Ocean. |
|
What the breakdown of Alexander's empire had accomplished was nothing less than the Hellenization of the Mediterranean world. |
|
It was so hot off Spain's Mediterranean coast that water temperatures rose by three degrees. |
|
Sue recycles glass, which other artists discard, and her work has a Mediterranean feel in terms of her colour palette and subject matter. |
|
Three years after the war ended I happened to be in the south of France, enjoying a few days on the sunny Mediterranean coast. |
|
A woman has spoken of how she escaped the stomach bug which plagued a Mediterranean cruise. |
|
One of the most notorious agricultural pests is the Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata. |
|
The forms of wrestling we know today as Greco-Roman and Freestyle found their origins in the lands on the eastern end of the Mediterranean Sea. |
|
Much of southern Australia experiences a typical Mediterranean climate with hot dry summers and predominantly winter rainfall. |
|
The urbanism of Northern dynasts was stimulated by this Mediterranean heritage, transmitted through the genre of Italian view painting. |
|
Hummus goes well with falafel or meat, and the tapenade and pesto will go well in Mediterranean meals. |
|
The weather is fine over the entire Mediterranean coast, but the tramontane is blowing over the coast of Languedoc. |
|
The earliest portolan maps covered the Mediterranean and Black Sea and showed wind directions and such information useful to sailors. |
|
He's an adventurous storyteller, interweaving comedy of manners with good old-fashioned Mediterranean melodrama. |
|
The marine climate has milder summers than the Mediterranean climate and rainfall occurs year round. |
|
Corridors funnel deep into the fabric of the building, like the alleyways of a Mediterranean town. |
|
The Parodi, a 337 ft long collier, carried war cargoes of coal from Wales to the Mediterranean for the next two years. |
|
|
A tall, slow growing Mediterranean umbellifer that grows wild in Greece, it makes a good structural plant for a border, or as a specimen. |
|
In the Mediterranean ocellated wrasse, satellite males help to defend the nest against small parasitic males. |
|
The tree is indigenous to the Mediterranean region, but will grow much further north. |
|
Country cooking of the Mediterranean relied on breadcrumbs to help form an emulsion base for a cold sauce, also known as a rouille. |
|
Finally, upstage right a cluster of small, close-set houses like a typical Mediterranean village represents Ephesus. |
|
When growing Mediterranean herbs, such as myrtle or bay, in containers, it is best to use a soil-based compost with extra grit. |
|
The Suez Canal and the Mediterranean must have been kinder because they were never blamed for her indisposition. |
|
They are tiny flower buds from Mediterranean shrubs, which are usually pickled in brine or sea salt. |
|
As a result, she got herself into shape physically, becoming a kind of Mediterranean Marilyn Monroe. |
|
Temperate carbonates were deposited in the Carboneras Basin, a small embayment of the Mediterranean Sea, during the early Pliocene. |
|
The region along the Adriatic coast has a Mediterranean climate with mild winters and hot, dry summers. |
|
Fresh from their studies of Doric ruins, Swedish architects tried to forcibly apply the ancient Mediterranean heritage to the Baltic Sea. |
|
Siganids are naturally confined to the tropical Indo-Pacific, but are now found in the eastern Mediterranean as well. |
|
In the Mediterranean and the narrow seas of Europe, aircraft took a leading part in the conduct of blockade. |
|
Every state in Europe with commercial interests in the Mediterranean had knuckled under to the extortion. |
|
The authors skimmed their bacteria samples from the top, or photic layer, of the Mediterranean and Red Seas. |
|
It turns out, as we know today, that large earthquakes in the eastern Mediterranean are clustered in time in the form of earthquake storms. |
|
I dream of travelling to the countries that are washed by the Mediterranean Sea. |
|
The marine life benefits from planktonic nutrients, which means the area is teeming with both Mediterranean and Atlantic species. |
|
Built using prototypes designed for sunny Mediterranean climes, the houses became traps for dampness. |
|
|
This bistro offers a relaxed Mediterranean ambience and an affordable globetrotter of a menu, ensuring there's something to suit all tastes. |
|
Sert tamed and harnessed the Mediterranean light with quadrantal cylinder windows. |
|
This remarkable Mediterranean herb is antiseptic, antispasmodic, and antibiotic. |
|
Thanks to a courageous conservation project, the critically endangered Mediterranean monk seal's future looks much brighter. |
|
As many properties in Mediterranean holiday resorts are densely built this is likely to be the major source of noise pollution. |
|
One example is the Nile, which was rejuvenated when the Mediterranean Sea dried up in the late Miocene. |
|
In the Mediterranean region the weather is mild and rainy in the winter and dry and very hot in the summer. |
|
Baking is somewhat less important in Mediterranean countries, where nut and sugar confections such as nougat sustain the sweet toothed. |
|
Our Mediterranean melange starts with purchased polenta, which we sliced and grilled with zucchini, fennel, and eggplant. |
|
Predator and prey species co-occur in brackish waterbodies close to the Mediterranean coast of Spain. |
|
Grey mullet is popular in Mediterranean dishes and goes well with rosemary, thyme, garlic and fennel. |
|
Chinese mandarins are larger and contain fewer seeds than most of the Mediterranean varieties. |
|
In a study, eating a Mediterranean diet for three months was found to bring about a reduction in joint pain and inflammation. |
|
Epidemiologic data support the benefits of a Mediterranean diet in reducing cardiac risk. |
|
It was then tested and found to apply in other habitat types such as wetlands and Mediterranean grasslands. |
|
According to one study, the risk of a fatal heart attack can be cut in half by switching to a Mediterranean diet. |
|
These worked well, colouring our subject's lily white skin with a light Mediterranean tan while leaving all the other colours in the shot true. |
|
At Union Square Cafe, we've always taken our cue from the Mediterranean diet. |
|
Last fall, a Harvard study pitted a typical low-calorie, low-fat diet against a low-calorie Mediterranean diet. |
|
Australian research into the Mediterranean diet has found that the way food is cooked can make a big difference. |
|
|
Today, olives are commercially produced throughout the Mediterranean area, particularly in Greece and Spain. |
|
The vine and the olive are the plants that characterize Mediterranean civilization. |
|
Anzac had anchored in the ancient seaport of Alexandria after a surprisingly rough transit through the Mediterranean Sea. |
|
He used Mediterranean and dry-climate plants such as lavender, salvia, santolina, and other plants that conserve moisture. |
|
His dark olive complexion, jet black hair, and deep brown eyes gave him the quintessential Mediterranean look favored by women. |
|
Catastrophic breaching of the hypothetical land bridge allowed salt water from the Mediterranean to pour into the Black Sea. |
|
During the time of the Romans, people selected the progenitor of the modern beet from a wild Mediterranean plant to use as a leaf vegetable. |
|
With forecasters predicting cool and showery weather, many sunseekers are heading for popular Mediterranean destinations. |
|
In true Mediterranean spirit, the production is tuned in to the vibrancy of life itself. |
|
In Mediterranean conditions players of both sides contributed to a thrilling encounter. |
|
This home's low-pitched, tiled roof is the hallmark of the Mediterranean style. |
|
The Mediterranean soils of terra rossa on a limestone bedrock are suited to extensive cereal culture and to dry arboriculture. |
|
This liquid storax has been confused with the storax of antiquity which came from the bark of the Styrax officinalis, a Mediterranean shrub. |
|
Indeed, Mediterranean plants and succulents like agaves work splendidly in coastal and desert plantings. |
|
Although many cookbooks underemphasize this fact, few countries bordering on the Mediterranean can support a meat-rich diet. |
|
Transpiration rates at high altitude may be very high, as for example in Mediterranean climates where temperature inversions are common. |
|
Vines trailing overhead and pot plants against the whitewashed walls add a Mediterranean feel. |
|
Other culinary herbs, like sage, rosemary and thyme, are native to Mediterranean regions where the air is rather temperate and dry. |
|
It was served with roasted Mediterranean vegetables, sweet potatoes, and balsamic butter sauce. |
|
Also known as cotton thistle, it is native to Mediterranean Europe, Africa and the Middle East. |
|
|
For a Mediterranean mix, place fresh basil leaves, cherry tomatoes, zucchini slices and fresh radicchio in a baggie. |
|
The food is organic vegetarian Mediterranean and Asian, made using local produce. |
|
The immediate aftermath of the war was marked by a nostalgic return by many artists to the springs of Mediterranean culture. |
|
They also say that an undisclosed Mediterranean country has agreed to allow the technique to be carried out. |
|
The word dogs is a strong insult in the Mediterranean world since dogs are generally regarded as scavengers. |
|
The white stucco walls, dark floors, central entry courtyard, and tile roof are reminiscent of a traditional Mediterranean house. |
|
Where Mediterranean fruit fly is a potential problem, bait should be laid six weeks before picking. |
|
Thracians were an intergral part of the evolution of ancient Mediterranean civilisation. |
|
The menu is Mediterranean fusion mixed with Jazz at lunchtime, then accompanied with a different musical theme each night. |
|
During World War II, Soper was sent to the Mediterranean theater of operations as part of the U.S.A. Typhus Commission. |
|
Trachelium caeruleum or blue throatwort is a member of the Campanula family and native to the West and Central Mediterranean region. |
|
In parts of the Mediterranean and the Middle East, the roasting is done by the burning sun. |
|
The Mediterranean fruit fly, commonly called the medfly, is one of the world's most destructive agricultural pests. |
|
Most worked in Mediterranean Europe as household servants, hospital orderlies, garbage collectors, or in similar menial positions. |
|
Celebrating their wedding anniversary in style, Frank and Doreen plan to go on a Mediterranean cruise. |
|
This weekend, somewhere on the Mediterranean coast, a short, grey Frenchman sits hunched over a notepad, restlessly jotting memories. |
|
The majority of settlers are concentrated in two main blocs along the northern border and southern Mediterranean coast. |
|
Once again, much of the focus is on securing porous borders, namely, the Mediterranean coastline. |
|
By signing up, you'll automatically enter our sweepstakes to win a Mediterranean cruise. |
|
There are many different packages available for Mediterranean cruises, so be sure to shop around to find the one that suits you best. |
|
|
The country has a 1200 km Mediterranean coastline and borders on six countries to the west, east, and south. |
|
The classically shaped knobs reinforce the house's Mediterranean character. |
|
The Mediterranean fruit fly Ceratitis capitata is a major pest of many important agricultural products. |
|
The BBC Arabic Service also broadcasts 720 and 639 kHz on medium wave to the Eastern Mediterranean and 1314 and 702 kHz in the Gulf region. |
|
Here, traditional Mediterranean devices have been collaged together to give a human heart to the formerly coldly functional institution. |
|
A native of the Mediterranean region, bear's breech does well in a sunny site with well-drained soil. |
|
The greylag goose is a native species in Iceland, the United Kingdom, and Europe, and it also winters in the Mediterranean and southern Asia. |
|
The Mediterranean climate has long dry sunny warm summers, and the winters often see periods of intense rainfall. |
|
Dwarf elephant, hippopotamus and deer disappeared from Mediterranean Islands around the time of human colonization. |
|
The nineteen-year-old in question is precociously hirsute on account of his Mediterranean parentage. |
|
The insect was later confirmed to be an Egyptian grasshopper, a voracious plant-eater normally found only in the Mediterranean area. |
|
Far from the sun-baked Mediterranean costas is another Spain, with a mild, damp climate, unspoilt countryside and property bargains. |
|
Egypt was probably the only source of emerald and other green beryl for the ancient civilizations of Europe and the Mediterranean region. |
|
Made from the inner bark of the Mediterranean cork oak tree, cork can be cut repeatedly from trees that may be hundreds of years old. |
|
Nonetheless, in this period the portolan chart remained very much centred on the Mediterranean and destinations easily reached from there. |
|
Population genetic structures of the mackerel and chub mackerel were studied in the Mediterranean Sea. |
|
He was a big-boned man of perhaps sixty, with a thick black moustache and a head of curly Mediterranean hair. |
|
English vineyard owners are forecasting a bumper grape crop under this summer's Mediterranean type sunshine. |
|
Thousands of soldiers sweep toward the Mediterranean coast leaving behind their dead and their dreams, to wander in the Anatolian desert under a seemingly inexpiable curse. |
|
Now, unlike the master shipbuilders of the Mediterranean civilizations, the Viking shipwrights didn't think in terms of cargo tonnage, military logistics, or naval tactics. |
|
|
A North Yorkshire couple whose Mediterranean cruise came to an abrupt end when their ship broke down 15 hours into its maiden voyage say they can't wait to get back on board. |
|
He notes that military captives and criminals were available in quantity and reminds us of the long tradition of galley slaves at the oars of Mediterranean shipping. |
|
If a luxurious Mediterranean cruise is your dream, do not despair. |
|
I returned to bed for two hours, and then eventually went to Wetherspoons where I had two glasses of Perrier and a Mediterranean vegetable pasta bake and treacle sponge. |
|
The entire population of 500,000 suffered from malaria, and the only functioning hotel in the country was a former Spanish Mediterranean ferry boat moored in the harbour. |
|
The Japanese consul in Alexandria was sending the Germans reports on the movement of the Mediterranean Fleet. |
|
The white-headed duck is the only stifftail to occur naturally in Europe, with a patchy distribution running from the western Mediterranean through to Central and East Asia. |
|
Appointed in a melding of neo-Classical and Mediterranean styles, the spa welcomes guests with Roman murals, Hellenic sculptures, fluted pillars, and terra-cotta tiles. |
|
The move buttresses Hormel's long-standing strategy to form joint ventures with Mexican, Asian, Indian and Mediterranean brands to cater to the growing ethnic population. |
|
Sure, there is a sandy Mediterranean beach a few miles away, and campsites, restaurants and bars catering for families on holiday in the new century. |
|
In the Mediterranean climate, heliophilia is merely a means of securing the xeromorphic adaptation that is necessary if the plants are to survive the difficult period of their first years of life. |
|
The man was about her age, with striking Mediterranean good looks. |
|
This rich agricultural area, which was sprinkled with old Phoenician harbours, was well within the known world of the Mediterranean trading economy. |
|
The coast has an equable Mediterranean climate well suited to agriculture. |
|
He was also reading some of the books published in the 1930s in Australia that claimed that whites were in fact complex mixtures of Nordic, Alpine and Mediterranean types. |
|
During the 12th and 11th centuries BCE, Thracians settled not only on the peninsular mainland and the Mediterranean islands, but also moved south-eastwards into Asia Minor. |
|
In order to eliminate the confusion that might arise in the Pacific, the nisei units were to be employed only in the Mediterranean and European theaters of operation. |
|
Spare a thought for the teachers who returned this week to the chalkface, their Mediterranean suntans fading as fast as the memories of the seven weeks' holiday. |
|
We also had a natter about psychology and the Mediterranean diet. |
|
He explained that he was also the owner of a Turkish yacht called a gulet that ran four-day excursions along the country's southwest Mediterranean coast. |
|
|
The art installation suggests the continuity and fragility of Mediterranean civilization, reminding us of the simultaneous remoteness and seamlessness of the past. |
|
Multi-activity specialist Neilson has also found that Mediterranean dive holidays aboard Turkish gulets are getting good repeat business from groups. |
|
The Mediterranean diet is lighter on the saturated fats found in meat and dairy products, and heavier on mono-unsaturated fats, found in olive oil and walnuts. |
|
And when counting the cost of our excesses, let us not forget the unfortunate Mediterranean authorities who have to pick up the pieces when holidaying Brits lose all control. |
|
Fruits and veggies are mainstays of the Mediterranean diet, along with legumes and fish. |
|
The blank background beautifully reflects the tonal differences, conjuring up the stark light of the Mediterranean and the murky tones of America. |
|
Boyle by then was a grizzled veteran of amphibious landings, having witnessed four of them in the Mediterranean Theater. |
|
His highly expressive style combines a jagged-edged turbulence with a Mediterranean hot-bloodedness, seen most recently in his works for New York City Ballet. |
|
The menu includes Mediterranean risotto of goat's cheese, sun-blush tomatoes and rocket and Thai monkfish and prawn kebabs marinated in lime and coriander. |
|
Compact, sleek and low-slung, it has the air of a car cornering at speed around a Mediterranean corniche even when it's parked outside your local Tesco. |
|
Relevant work on the nutritional value of Mediterranean therophyte and chamaephytes and their selection under grazing pressure was not found in the literature. |
|
The small sail at the top of a mast was called a stargazer, and so is a Mediterranean fish with eyes set at the top of its head, and a horse that holds its head back. |
|
Once in the eastern Mediterranean they bought up the local gold bezant coins of the Byzantine empire or Arabic dinars and ultimately these became a source of gold for Europe. |
|
In addition, palaeoecological and historical research has demonstrated the presence of forests in arid zones of the Mediterranean area in historical times. |
|
The multicolored palette of a full symphony orchestra has been the perfect instrument to give voice to musical evocations of this Mediterranean land. |
|
The Mediterranean weather, beautiful sunsets viewed from the Naples Pier, beach combing, fine dining and world-class art make Naples an art destination adventure. |
|
Australian military history abounds with such examples of valour, from the battlefields of Europe to Africa, from the Mediterranean to the Pacific. |
|
Its wild relatives, known as oleaster forms, are generally indistinguishable from feral types and constitute a common component of the Mediterranean vegetation. |
|
A Mediterranean sun had just set, and above the school, hollow bells clanged around the necks of goats, and the chatter of crickets filled the night air. |
|
The accompanying scrub consists of Mediterranean mezereons, bush germanders, kermes oaks, sarsaparillas, lentisks, oleanders, strawberry trees, myrtles and junipers. |
|
|
But it wasn't until Choco Chanel charlestoned back from the Mediterranean with a deep golden tan, that bronzed skin became a truly desirable item. |
|
He also encourages them to employ Mediterranean ingredients like rosemary, garlic, tomatoes and eggplant to bring out the fruit flavors of red wines. |
|
It is said that it is good for the skin and Greeks and peoples of the Mediterranean flavoured their foods, such as rice, fish, cheese, and soups with it. |
|
A rise in the Mediterranean sea level and sudden submersion caused by earthquakes or climate changes could explain the annihilation of the cities, he said. |
|
Dozens of British holidaymakers have been taken ill at a popular Mediterranean hotel where the swimming pool has now been closed, it was announced yesterday. |
|
The menu includes dishes such as squid with asparagus and mint, baby goat with fresh Mediterranean herbs and his famous dessert of eggplant and chocolate. |
|
In 1996 we detected Mediterranean fruit flies in one of our traps. |
|
The spectacular red helleborine orchid is distributed from Iran throughout the Mediterranean region and up to western Europe, reaching southern Scandinavia. |
|
Look for unique flowers from the Mediterranean climate regions of the world, such as African daisies, Australian kangaroo paw and Mediterranean throatwort. |
|
One such grape variety is muscat, which with typical Mediterranean ardour makes up a large, colourful, diverse family that has the capacity to make all sorts of wines. |
|
The Vikings are the archetypal slavers in European history, enslaving victims in eastern Europe and the Mediterranean area, and selling them in markets far away. |
|
Both gigs start at 7.30 pm and Mediterranean food will be available. |
|
Libya is in northern Africa, its northernmost region bordered by the Mediterranean Sea. |
|
They had been grazing in one of Crete's dozens of fabulous gorges, where sheer cliffs soar spectacularly on either side as you head for the Mediterranean Sea. |
|
His accent was not French, but an undistinguishable Mediterranean mix. |
|
The increasing number of direct flights from Dublin to Italy alongside the saturation of other Mediterranean resorts could see this effect trickle across the Irish Sea. |
|
The Mediterranean stone pine, P. pinea, grows at quite low altitudes, as anyone familiar with the landscapes of Provence, Italy, and the Middle East will be aware. |
|
In the mid-1960s, scientists dredging up ooze from the bottom of the Mediterranean began to notice a thick layer of ash that they linked to Thera's eruption. |
|
The exiled militants were flown by British military transport to the Mediterranean island of Cyprus were they were put up at a seaside hotel under police guard. |
|
In the Middle Ages many Alsace wines were fortified or spiced in order to compete with the fuller bodied Mediterranean wines such as sack and malmsey. |
|
|
On my first day skiing at La Molina, Spain's oldest ski resort, I got a fantastic view across the Pyrenean foothills to the shores of the Mediterranean 60 miles away. |
|
It has been greatest in the ancient heartlands of civilization in the Mediterranean Basin, western and central Asia, and China, and least in the polar desert. |
|
Cruise the Mediterranean in unaccustomed splendour aboard the Royal Clipper, the only square-sailed full-rigged ship in the world with five masts. |
|
The belief is especially prevalent today in the Mediterranean and Aegean, where apotropaic amulets and talismans are commonly sold as protection against the evil eye. |
|
Nato also has dispatched seven frigates, a destroyer, and an auxiliary oiler to the Mediterranean to take the place of American naval assets there. |
|
They go well with the strong Mediterranean flavours of anchovy, garlic, capers, extra virgin olive oil, rosemary and oregano, and Greek cheeses such as feta and halloumi. |
|
We don't treat the heat, as Mediterranean peoples do, as an inevitable feature of the summer and a mixed blessing to be treated with circumspection. |
|
There are the Mediterranean tompot blenny, the bashful yellow-faced or striped blenny, and the tiny Caribbean secretary blenny, giving office staff a bad name. |
|
For those weeks, I played a part in a Mediterranean drama, full of energy and humor and passion, unencumbered by words, and, therefore, self-examination. |
|
Olive oil is also a key component of the Mediterranean diet. |
|
The unit had been stealthily airdropped at the Mediterranean beach, and had spent four hours making their way inland along the Tiber River to the city. |
|
Also, in communities where long-standing Mediterranean diets have been shifting toward more Westernized food choices, the prevalence of obesity is on the rise. |
|
The Celtic and Anglo-Saxon peoples of the west were in this sense colonized subjects, just as many Slavic groups were in the east and Mediterranean peoples to the south. |
|
He really makes me believe sometimes he has Mediterranean blood in him! |
|
This semantic field reveals an emic understanding of blindness, which involves the importance of everything visual in ancient Mediterranean culture. |
|
Palomares was then a small fishing village and farming community located on the Mediterranean Sea. |
|
One night in the summer of 1749, a waterspout appeared in the Mediterranean Sea just off the coast of Italy. |
|
The Russian navy relies on the Syrian port Tartus for access to the Mediterranean Sea. |
|
Away from the package holidaymakers, she is free to explore the scorched Mediterranean landscape and investigate what it is that seems to be wrong with her. |
|
But the traditionalists point out that the Egyptians distinguished themselves from the Nubians and other African and Mediterranean peoples in appearance and dress. |
|
|
Her Mediterranean vegetables with chicken and sweet potato was judged the tastiest of thousands of entries and is now a teatime treat with babies from seven months up. |
|
Libyans are by and large charming, charismatic, humorous people with a Mediterranean joie de vivre. |
|
Know what that hug or abrazo between Mediterranean men signifies? |
|
They then took the borrowed money and invested it in Greek bonds and in loans to customers around the Mediterranean and Adriatic. |
|
The ship now shifts slightly with the rise and fall of the low Mediterranean tides, moving about a millimeter an hour. |
|
Explosive population growth in the Arab world coupled with Europe's unprecedented baby bust presages a radical change in the balance of power in the Mediterranean world. |
|
Without a dedicated and proactive rescue force, campaigners fear, the death toll in the Mediterranean will skyrocket. |
|
Unlike the North Atlantic station, the Mediterranean was a vital British operational command operating from Malta and Gibraltar. |
|
Archaeology has shown some evidence of continuity with Roman education, trade with the Mediterranean and with Celtic art. |
|
He lobbied hard with the Admiralty to obtain additional ships and supplies for the Mediterranean squadron. |
|
It acquired an indigenous population that was influential in the Mediterranean during its long prehistory. |
|
Africa's collision with Europe formed the Mediterranean Sea, cutting off the remnants of the Tethys Ocean. |
|
The Mediterranean is characterised and immediately recognised by its deep blue colour. |
|
The Sicilian population is the only Mediterranean insular population that has not been introduced. |
|
Matters had been delayed as Kitchener was away on an inspection tour of the Mediterranean and French was sick in bed. |
|
As a consequence of Alexander's conquests, koine Greek had become the shared language around the eastern Mediterranean and into Asia Minor. |
|
Tzatziki, yogurt mixed with garlic and salt is a common sauce in Eastern Mediterranean cuisines. |
|
Amber used in antiquity as at Mycenae and in the prehistory of the Mediterranean comes from deposits of Sicily. |
|
Although most of the state has a Mediterranean climate, due to the state's large size, the climate ranges from subarctic to subtropical. |
|
Traders came from Gaul and the Mediterranean localities to seek minerals from North Wales and Cheshire. |
|