He added that he would mobilise all former players, fans and well-wishers to support the noble cause. |
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To follow in the Buddhas' footsteps to nirvana requires that one be shown the way, specifically how to tread the Eightfold Noble Path. |
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Only women of certain noble families could gain admittance to its cloister. |
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Democratic movements had started out with the noble intentions of ending the tyranny of autocratic rulers. |
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In the film he is someone with a generous heart and an open mind, sensitive, selfless and even noble. |
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It may well be an immaculately written novel, correctly spelt, beautifully punctuated, and full of poetic language and noble ideas. |
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Each idyll is a society in the distant future or the remote past that can be held up as a noble alternative to American society. |
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Noble ideas about feeding the world are being used to cloak ambitions of economic dominance. |
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We sense the tragedy of the poetic ballad and the noble lineage of its characters in the very opening measures of the musical rendering. |
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The social set is torn between pegging him as a total rat fink or a noble whistle-blower. |
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I'm sad that such noble, amiable and inventive creatures could be treated so cruelly. |
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Allow me to introduce you to my squire, and good kinsman, the noble Valerius de Aurelius. |
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Manors and even small keeps abound in the highlands, not tourist attractions but still noble family estates. |
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A man of many noble qualities, Frank was always conscientious in his dealings with people. |
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The social climbers thrust their way into the noble preserve not to destroy it but to make it their own. |
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They wish her many more contented years in health and happiness and pay tribute to a noble lady who possesses sterling qualities. |
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He plays Levin, the troubled noble whose story runs parallel to the adulteress of the title. |
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Their singing is wonderfully mellow, noble, and, at the same time, devout, creating an atmosphere of calmness and reflection. |
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The hellish day was designed to root out the weak and weak-minded, confirmed coach Brian Noble. |
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It is a place to reflect on noble sacrifice and draw comfort from the balm of uplifting scenery. |
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This is because the noble medium of funny pictures and word balloons is often derided as juvenile and strictly a boys' own pastime. |
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Noble sentiment orchestrates the canvas, which was executed for the subject of the sculpted bust on the pedestal, Dr. Upton Scott. |
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This in my opinion was no more of a noble battle than any unwarranted slaughter in the history of the mankind. |
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Though scantily fed, and often utterly discouraged by failure, they were still making a noble fight for existence. |
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After paying homage for the noble act, Dantes recovered the buried treasure and became extremely wealthy. |
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She followed Mrs Noble up a wide staircase and then a narrower set of stairs. |
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They were resilient people of noble character who knew the line between right and wrong. |
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The ancient was a banner bearing an heraldic device, the token of ancient or noble descent, borne by a gentleman or a leader in a war. |
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In the same year, Ramsay and Travers discovered two other noble gases, xenon and neon. |
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Four important chemical family names of elements still widely used are the alkali metals, the alkaline earths, the halogens, and the noble gases. |
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He fails completely, of course, but with his attempts to confound and wrong-foot audiences more used to linear stories, it is a noble failure. |
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Don't get me wrong here, planting trees is a very noble pursuit, and should be encouraged. |
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O noble, prudent folk in happier case! Your dice-box doth not tumble out ambsace. |
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You should consider yourself lucky that you have been matched with a young noble at all. |
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I cannot bear the thought of one so compassionate and noble as you having such a low opinion of me. |
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Her track list doesn't add up to anything more than a desire, however noble, to cover folk songs. |
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Eventually, inspired by these noble research efforts, but also by my vodka and karela juice, I decided to make my own contribution. |
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Its noble gesture resides in taking on board the issue of reconciling a modern, consumerist world with an ancient one. |
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The noble river Severn takes its rise from the Ellennith mountains and falls into the sea a few miles from Gloucester. |
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That uniform is stained with the noble blood of those who've fallen in battle for their country. |
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This might make them stupid, as well as noble, but it has always been a refreshing point of difference. |
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Lecturers and researchers are a special breed of people who have chosen the noble profession of teaching. |
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Even Web sites with a noble mission to restore a sense of community now have to earn their keep. |
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This is a noble sentiment and entirely in keeping with the true spirit of the Olympics. |
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Her father, a noble magistrate in Grenoble, sent her, against her wishes, to become a nun. |
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It takes time and effort to overcome such obstacles that are inevitable in a worthy and noble endeavour. |
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So I think people who are trying to help students genuinely write better English prose are doing a noble service. |
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Purple is a noble color in its deepest values, yet it can be flowery and refreshing in pale violet colorings. |
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He was a strong and rugged elf who could often appear aggressive, but was truly kind and noble at heart. |
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I think his voice is noble, mellifluous, rich and with a good range of colours. |
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But our work has been noble and necessary, and we can't call a halt to it in midstream. |
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The Shoin Building, a noble summer house constructed in Japan and reassembled on the island, allows for some interesting viewing. |
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Archibald found himself lining up the kick as normal kicker Noble had lost a contact lens in the build-up to the score. |
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She has become the noble and marriageable daughter of a wealthy feudal lord. |
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The profession of arms is a noble calling, and there is no shame in wage labor. |
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They go home feeling accomplished, smug and self-satisfied because their intentions were noble and worthy. |
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Wherever I have been, I have worked for the attainment of that noble goal and the records are there to show it. |
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But no, neither was proper for a young lady of noble blood, a princess especially. |
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Ten years before this in 63 BC, another noble, Catiline, had declared support for redistributing land and cancelling debts. |
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I also believe that the beaver is a truly proud and noble animal, although I am not Canadian. |
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Each of these requirements is worthy, even noble, but in their totality they should be cause for alarm. |
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But the Holy Prophet, or his noble companions never observed the birthday or anniversary of any of them. |
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It's all too often clumsy, insincere and inappropriate, making a mockery of otherwise noble values. |
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He belonged to the noble or warrior caste and is depicted as wealthy and indulgent towards his son. |
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A noble, obdurate of his usual code of conduct, stumbled in a panic fuelled frenzy of blind groping and misplaced steps. |
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After a noble gesture by a donor he is now back for keratoplasty in the other eye. |
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Playing a character with two personalities may be a noble and actorly thing to attempt, unfortunately it is also difficult. |
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Eight years of toiling for the attentions of some noble benefactress and eight years of writing stories. |
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The heroic deeds of this brave and noble Irishman have brought honour and glory to his native land. |
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This is a discussion of the Four Noble Truths by one well grounded in the Buddha's teachings. |
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Why were the noble elite of an advanced Iron Age tribe dressed in drab rags and covered in mud? |
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The Scottish sculptor Michael Noble and the psychiatrist Mario Marini were salaried by her as well. |
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Instead of people with unkempt hair and raggedy clothes, there were well-dressed servants and slaves, and an occasional noble riding by. |
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It looks like the kind of book you'd find remaindered in the front shelves of Barnes and Noble where they keep all the bargain books corralled together. |
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His face was noble and his eyes glittered keenly with curiosity. |
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As the story goes, many Venetian nuns were noble women forced into the convent to save their families from bankruptcy. |
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Remember that the Evil One is ruling over a community of noble savages, peace-loving people whose only problem is that they are oppressed by the Evil One. |
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The best newcomer award went to the double act Noble and Silver. |
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Clearly, some of the nurses are in the noble calling for the money. |
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To be professionally involved in music is one of life's noble callings. |
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It creates a cynicism in us that is not the most noble of things to dwell upon. |
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How does one live a life of noble reclusion in the real world? |
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There's no one who can touch Noble for flights of nonsensical fancy. |
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The general public seems to want gays to be noble and fun, but also sexless. |
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These were youths of noble birth and of doubtful education who would serve in the ranks and then receive commissions after two or more years' service. |
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These are just heaps of noble materials sheathing insignificant forms and insipid patterns or inappropriate functions that could have been rejected. |
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Only sheer audacity would enable an author to rewrite the history of a nation's seminal figures, tarnishing the name of Judaism's noble ancestors. |
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It was possible for young men of relatively low status to make a mark through their prowess, but in general the participants were already of noble or at least knightly birth. |
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One Kongo noble told a 17 th-century chronicler that the original inhabitants of his region were small men with big heads, fat bellies, and short legs. |
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Here our noble hero sits out on the moors, accompanied by his dogs, surrounded by the spoils of a good day's sport and communing with this great, noble landscape. |
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The pain and disappointment of the defeat was writ large across the faces of the Great Britain players as they trudged from the field, but coach Brian Noble remained stoical. |
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Many of the ship's complement were adventurers from noble families, and jewellery and coins, mainly gold, percolated to the bottom of the shingle-filled gullies. |
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His mate soon gives birth to a son, Simba, and Mufasa teaches his heir apparent how to become a noble leader. |
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And they were quick to defend the noble white rose yesterday, especially after it was revealed voters had chosen to leave rival Lancastrians with their red rose. |
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In other words, the noble landlords and magnates, whose values were decidedly not those of Puritan asceticism, were in the vanguard of capitalism. |
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The letter closes with noble words of faith and hope from the hot zone where screw-ups are met each day with selfless courage. |
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Throughout the medieval period the term yeoman was used within the royal and noble households to indicate a servant's rank, degree, position or status. |
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She was one of the wealthiest women in the world and certainly the most eccentric noble of her time. |
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It is a scandal that shames the good name of noble Limerick. |
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For them, war was a life-long, inter-generational, noble endeavor. |
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Since Zarathustra tells women that their greatest hope should be to bear the overman, Nietzsche is sometimes taken to exclude the concept of the noble woman. |
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In fact, everyone involved in the romantic triangle is noble. |
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You shouldn't be surprised that misfortune befalls noble men. |
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His films, sprightly action flicks with clear lines between good and evil and a noble hero, touched a chord in a post-war America. |
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Those of us who are noble born learn to play almost from the cradle. |
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My oldest sister, Bridget, water-skied in a two-piece bathing suit, her long brown hair lifted off a noble neck. |
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By the same token, boxing is a transposition of a noble pursuit of post-pub Britain into an artificial environment of padded gloves and gumshields. |
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The truth is slippery, and plumbing the past to catch hold of it is as quixotic a quest as the search for the perfect bottle of wine, but it is a noble and necessary one. |
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There is gratuitous torture, interrogational torture, judicial torture, vengeful torture, intimidational torture, torture as punishment and noble cause torture. |
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Attached to the plane tree or any other tree for that matter, there was nothing noble about his robes, and barbarous gold, and all his other gifts. |
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How question Shakespeare's sympathy for such a youthful, noble victim who would, I think, find any one of the situations awaiting him far in excess of any objectless feeling? |
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Both Mr Noble and Mr Roper then hammered on the room doors along the corridor to rouse other guests before dashing upstairs to wake people on the top floor. |
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Instead he found Juan Gonzalez Ponce de Leon, a valiant suitor of noble, unblemished credentials. |
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To come to the point at once, I beg to say that I have not the least belief in the Noble Savage. |
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He had the upbringing of a Gaelic noble on the Stewart lands in Bute, Clydeside, and in Renfrew. |
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In 1450, King James II sent a company of 24 noble Scots under the command of Patrick de Spens, son of his custodian. |
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Stevenson translated a French study into the noble families which suffered so much in the Hundred Years' War, and is oft quoted. |
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He is of noble stature, neither tall nor short, and as handsome in complexion and shape as a man can be. |
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As the nineteenth century antiquarian John Riddell supposed, nearly every noble family in Scotland would have lost a member at Flodden. |
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He noted that though he was not of noble birth, he had the same duty as any subject to warn of dangers to the realm. |
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It was the home of a noble family known as the 'Maxwells of Calderwood' who resided in Calderwood Castle. |
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The Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle is an order of chivalry associated with Scotland. |
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It also heralded the introduction of new noble titles from continental Europe, which were to replace the old Norse titles. |
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The similarity between the Irish and Gaulish way to establish noble rank has already been remarked upon above. |
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Comparable similarities seem also to have existed in the mutual responsibilities between noble patron and client. |
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On the European continent, there is a clear difference between noble arms and burgher arms. |
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Clans with recognised chiefs are therefore considered a noble community under Scots law. |
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Although gold is the most noble of the noble metals, it still forms many diverse compounds. |
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Binary compounds of zinc are known for most of the metalloids and all the nonmetals except the noble gases. |
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Silver does not react with air, even at red heat, and thus was considered by alchemists as a noble metal along with gold. |
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After this Dolbadarn Castle served as his base but by March this noble site in the heart of Snowdonia was also threatened forcing his departure. |
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In 1978, Dr Frank Noble challenged some of Fox's conclusions, stirring up new academic interest in Offa's Dyke. |
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Shakespeare, who frequently uses flower imagery, refers to daffodils twice in The Winter's Tale and also The Two Noble Kinsmen. |
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By 1985, Roy Noble was also a regular daily voice, presenting weekday magazine shows for the station for 27 years. |
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Imperial, royal and noble preference also plays a role in the change of Chinese cuisines. |
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The only Vandal governor of Sardinia about whom there is substantial record is the last, Godas, a Visigoth noble. |
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In 1443 the island was already inhabited but active settlement only began with the arrival of the noble Flemish native Wilhelm Van der Haegen. |
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The plenipotentiary of the Czar was Count George Mocenigo, a noble from Zante who had earlier served as Russian diplomat in Italy. |
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Many locals, merchant and noble alike, envied the power of the league and tried to diminish it. |
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After the 860s, Lotharingian noble Robert the Strong became increasingly powerful as count of Anjou, Touraine and Maine. |
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Shortly after his birth, John was passed from Eleanor into the care of a wet nurse, a traditional practice for medieval noble families. |
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Philip decided to take advantage of this situation, first in Germany, where he aided German noble rebellion in support of the young Frederick. |
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While details of Cabral's early life are unclear, it is known that he came from a minor noble family and received a good education. |
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He may have chosen some of his noble mistresses for political purposes, but the evidence to support this theory is limited. |
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Henry appears to have chosen her because she was attractive and came from a prestigious noble line. |
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In about 1680, he rebuilt his ancestral seat of Stowe House in Cornwall in a grand style befitting his new noble status. |
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He develops an impassioned admiration for Steerforth, perceiving him as something noble, who could do great things if he would. |
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The teachings of Buddhism include the Noble Eightfold Path, comprising a division called right action. |
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In some parts of Europe the right of private war long remained the privilege of every noble. |
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Noble estates, on the other hand, gradually came to descend by primogeniture in much of western Europe aside from Germany. |
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In Scandinavia, the Benelux nations and Spain there are still untitled as well as titled families recognised in law as noble. |
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In practice, however, a noble family's financial assets largely defined its significance. |
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This basic standard explains why the noble population was relatively large, although the economic status of its members varied widely. |
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The bestowal of noble and aristocratic titles was widespread across the empire even after its fall by independent monarchs. |
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In the context of the ancient tradition and norms of Castilian nobililty, all descendants of a noble are considered noble, regardless of fortune. |
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During the existence of the Empire of Brazil 1211 noble titles were acknowledged. |
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A list of noble titles for different European countries can be found at Royal and noble ranks. |
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To dramatize its evil, he romanticizes Caribbean life, nearly invoking images of noble savages. |
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Undoubtedly, it achieves those noble aims, but just as important, it's always the tearjerker of the year. |
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However, because noble lines went extinct naturally, some number of ennoblements was necessary. |
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Beaten just a nose by Noble Mission in the Gordon Stakes was Godolphin's Encke and he is set to reoppose. |
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In the race itself, Beauchamp Noble went on at the fourth-last and scored by seven lengths from German raider Aventurin. |
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He had, during many years, earned his daily bread by pandaring to the vicious taste of the pit, and by grossly flattering rich and noble patrons. |
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Gulf of Mexico except the Noble Clyde Boudreaux which is scheduled to be remanned tomorrow. |
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Alternatively, they may instead be admired and romanticised as noble savages. |
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A few contexts in the Chinese classics romanticize or idealize barbarians, comparable to the western noble savage construct. |
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Generally their royal or noble status is recognized by and derived from the authority of traditional custom. |
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If the accused were a noble and the victim not a noble, the likelihood of finding for the accused was small. |
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Lescarbot's familiarity with Montaigne, is discussed by Ter Ellingson in The Myth of the Noble Savage. |
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The figure of Hayy is both a Natural man and a Wise Persian, but not a Noble Savage. |
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And gravitate toward noble entities you spy behind froggy appearances. |
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An Asturian Visigothic noble named Pelagius of Asturias in 718 AD was elected leader. |
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He is referred to as a noble translator and poet by Eustache Deschamps and by his contemporary John Gower. |
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Several candidates were presented to him including one young woman from a noble family. |
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Richard came from a good family, but one that was neither noble nor wealthy. |
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My position is, that if we have anything to learn from the Noble Savage, it is what to avoid. |
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Everyone, even noble passengers of greater formal rank, were under his jurisdiction. |
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Alexander was raised in the manner of noble Macedonian youths, learning to read, play the lyre, ride, fight, and hunt. |
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Alexander also had a close relationship with his friend, general, and bodyguard Hephaestion, the son of a Macedonian noble. |
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Though the aim of chivalry was to noble action, its conflicting values often degenerated into violence. |
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She would unarm her noble heart of that steely resistance against the sweet blows of love. |
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From the beginning of the Brotherhood's formation in 1848, their pieces of art included subjects of noble or religious disposition. |
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Of the various collateral patrilines, the senior in order of descent from the founding ancestor, the line of eldest sons, was the most noble. |
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Egan made Robin Hood of noble birth but raised by the forestor Gilbert Hood. |
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Scholars debate the scope of the word castle, but usually consider it to be the private fortified residence of a lord or noble. |
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Peter's main policies were concerned with restricting the political power of the great noble houses and expanding the powers of the crown. |
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In 1451, he was appointed noble officer of the marine corps of crossbowmen on a galley to Alexandria. |
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Martin Leme was the son of Martin Lems and his noble Portuguese wife Joana Barroso. |
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The commission, Courter insisted, was engaged in something just and even noble. |
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Once, the quinceanera marked a noble girl's passage to adulthood and her availability for possible marriage. |
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The noble people clothing, this type of costume was for citizens who are very rich can wear this type costume. |
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But there is a way to liberation from this endless cycle to the state of nirvana, namely following the Noble Eightfold Path. |
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At that time an ambassador was a nobleman, the rank of the noble assigned varying with the prestige of the country he was delegated to. |
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The skateboarder is as irredeemably evil as the others are noble. |
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Dukkha is a central concept of Buddhism and part of its Four Noble Truths doctrine, and a central characteristic of life in this world. |
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The identity of his parents is still unknown, but he appears to have been a member of a distinguished and influential noble family. |
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Boys wishing to follow his noble example also tackled problems with a range of plastic ray guns. |
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According to indigenous histories, land was held communally by noble houses or clans. |
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In noble families a Greek nurse usually taught the children Latin and Greek. |
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Nerva had a noble ancestry, and he had served as an advisor to Nero and the Flavians. |
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More's decision to educate his daughters set an example for other noble families. |
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A number of royal and noble titles have been identified by epigraphers translating Classic Maya inscriptions. |
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Fostering is possibly a sign of noble birth, as are references to his riding a horse when young. |
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It glorified Naziism as something great, noble and admirable in the face of genocide and military conquest. |
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Little is known of Maya merchants, although they are depicted on Maya ceramics in elaborate noble dress. |
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According to him, Romans, like other people, had an historical ethos preserved mainly in the noble families. |
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The English currency was almost exclusively silver until 1344 when the gold noble was successfully introduced into circulation. |
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Chivalry and the ethos of courtly love developed in royal and noble courts. |
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These peasants were often subject to noble overlords and owed them rents and other services, in a system known as manorialism. |
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Bavarian Spalt Noble hops give the beer a crisp elegance that is not bitter and leaves a smooth aftertaste. |
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Other holders of Spanish noble titles that descend from the Aztec emperor include Dukes of Atrisco. |
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The band plays original material written by Noble, which stretches Tin Pan Alley songwriting into avant garde areas of exploration. |
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Peter Tither, who paid online firm Noble Titles PS2,000 for lofty Lord of the Manor status, believes he is still a commoner. |
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Why may not imagination trace the noble dust of Alexander, till he find it stopping a bung-hole? |
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Than the kynge for grete favour made Tramtryste to be put in his doughtyrs awarde and kepying, because she was a noble surgeon. |
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He stood full six feet in height, with noble shoulders, and a chest like a coffer-dam. |
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Amidst the concourse were to be seen the noble ladies of Milan, in gay, fantastic cars, shining in silk brocade. |
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By living as a drone, to be an unprofitable and unworthy member of so noble and learned a society. |
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The simplicity which is so large an element in a noble nature was laughed to scorn. |
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Me thinks vertue is another manner of thing, and much more noble than the inclinations unto goodnesse, which in us are ingendered. |
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He had turned her adrift, neither a wife, widow, nor maid, and here she was, one of the most estimably lovable and noble women I have ever met. |
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British society is divided into nobility, gentry, and yeomanry, and families are either noble, gentle, or simple. |
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People with noble and serene thoughts are found in higher subdivisions that have heavenlike conditions but are not actual heavens. |
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The portcullis was originally the badge of various English noble families from the 14th century. |
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Ambrosio beheld before him that once noble and majestic form, now become a corse, cold, senseless, and disgusting. |
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This passage describes how Hrothgar's legendary ancestor Scyld was found as a baby, washed ashore, and adopted by a noble family. |
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The gulf between noble and ignoble was very large, but the difference between a freeman and an indentured labourer was small. |
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He also increased the number of Patricians by adding new families to the dwindling number of noble lines. |
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Eadulf, a Saxon noble, was appointed to organise the defence of Sussex but died from the plague before much could be done. |
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Having inherited the March and Ulster titles, he became the wealthiest and most powerful noble in England, second only to the king himself. |
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During the battle, the Gascon noble Jean de Grailly, captal de Buch led a mounted unit that was concealed in a forest. |
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Many of Queen Elizabeth's relatives were married into noble families and others were granted peerages or royal offices. |
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Shakespeare collaborated on two further surviving plays, Henry VIII and The Two Noble Kinsmen, probably with John Fletcher. |
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In 1875 a statue of Cromwell by Matthew Noble was erected in Manchester outside the cathedral, a gift to the city by Mrs. |
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Even so, William's supporters sought ways to enhance his prestige and, on 19 September 1668, the States of Zeeland appointed him as First Noble. |
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This became possibly the most famous story about Sir Phillip, intended to illustrate his noble and gallant character. |
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For indeed your Lordship's House was happy to me, and I kiss your noble hands for the welcome which I am sure you give me to it. |
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If Behn is a curious exception to the rule of noble verse, Robert Gould breaks that rule altogether. |
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They first played music together in a group formed by Keith Noble and Clive Metcalfe with Noble's sister Sheilagh. |
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In 1964, as Metcalfe and Noble left to form their own band, guitarist Syd Barrett joined Klose and Waters at Stanhope Gardens. |
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I regarded the Suffolk Punch as a noble animal, well suited to dominate our design and represent the club. |
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It appears, as is well known in later times, that noble kin groups had their own patron saints, and their own churches or abbeys. |
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Because of her noble birth, she bitterly resented her position as a morganatic wife. |
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Why are you so critical of baseball?... something pure and noble like the American flag, motherhood and apple pie. |
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His father, Gwilym Gam, and mother, Ardudfyl, were both from noble families. |
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At 25 years of age, Hume, although of noble ancestry, had no source of income and no learned profession. |
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The constitution explicitly prohibits the enactment of noble privileges, titles, and ranks. |
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Returning from Britain to Rome in 62, he married Domitia Decidiana, a woman of noble birth. |
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However, as growing noble youths, outdoor pursuits and great events would also have held a strong fascination for Robert and his brothers. |
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For cavalry, by far the weakest element of the Scottish host, Wallace depended on the Comyns and the other noble families. |
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This pyramid progressed from the unfree population at its base up to the heads of noble fine held in immediate clientship by the king. |
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The percentage of ethnically European noble prize winners during the first and second halves of the 20th century were respectively 98 and 94 percent. |
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His father, Jacques de Secondat, was a soldier with a long noble ancestry. |
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Napoleon's noble, moderately affluent background afforded him greater opportunities to study than were available to a typical Corsican of the time. |
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The new system demanded a new imperial language for the noble class. |
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They are never alone that are accompanied with noble thoughts. |
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Boarhunting continued after the fall of the Western Roman Empire, though the Germanic tribes considered the red deer to be a more noble and worthy quarry. |
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A small cast worked within a simple circle, and McKellen's Macbeth had nothing noble or likeable about him, being a manipulator in a world of manipulative characters. |
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In seeking to unionize the garage's 18 workers, Noble created a huge fuss. |
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Following that loss, Brian Noble, then head coach confirmed his departure. |
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In common hagiographical fashion, the Vita Alcuini asserts that Alcuin was 'of noble English stock,' and this statement has usually been accepted by scholars. |
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The Lord Justice General was originally an important noble, though in the 19th century, the office was combined with that of Lord President of the Court of Session. |
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His friendship is of a noble make and a lasting consistency. |
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It was very noble, very distingue, to ruin one's self without knowing how! |
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The four noble truths summarise the main doctrines of Buddhism. |
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This is what is related by the Genoese noble Antoniotto Usodimare. |
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Noble knights came from the ranks of the infanzones or lower nobles, whereas the commoner knights were not noble but were wealthy enough to afford a horse. |
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Ryan Noble and Callum Patton fired Ian Chandler's side into a two-goal lead, but when Prince Mongo halved the deficit Crook were in with a chance of causing an upset. |
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During this period, the Tower of London held many noble prisoners of war. |
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A lord was in broad terms a noble who held land, a vassal was a person who was granted possession of the land by the lord, and the land was known as a fief. |
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Its extreme downtown is the battery, where that noble mole is washed by waves, and cooled by breezes, which a few hours previous were out of sight of land. |
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We can see such ideas as having root in eighteenth-century notions of the noble, self-sufficient peasant, in Romanticism, and in English radical agrarianism. |
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A vital reform was effected by the House itself in 1868, when it changed its standing orders so as to prevent noble Lords from voting without taking the trouble to attend. |
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Halsall and Noble have argued that such changes stemmed from the breakdown in Roman political control, which exposed the weakness of local Roman rule. |
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Claims of descent from Visigothic noble families also became common. |
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This made poetry an exclusive occupation of the noble classes. |
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All five of the naturally occurring noble gases were discovered at UCL by Professor of Chemistry Sir William Ramsay, after whom Ramsay Hall is named. |
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Niven's law. No cause is so noble that it won't attract fuggheads. |
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It was a part of Buddha's first sermon, where he presented the Noble Eightfold Path that was a 'middle way' between the extremes of asceticism and hedonistic sense pleasures. |
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Its equivalent in England, The Most Noble Order of the Garter, is the oldest documented order of chivalry in the United Kingdom, dating to the middle fourteenth century. |
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A people which takes no pride in the noble achievements of remote ancestors will never achieve anything worthy to be remembered with pride by remote descendants. |
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Berkeley was born at his family home, Dysart Castle, near Thomastown, County Kilkenny, Ireland, the eldest son of William Berkeley, a cadet of the noble family of Berkeley. |
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The title of Le'ul Ras was accorded to the heads of various noble families and cadet branches of the Solomonic dynasty, such as the princes of Gojjam, Tigray, and Selalle. |
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These laws, however, proved no impediment to wealthier prostitutes because their glamorous appearances were almost indistinguishable from noble women. |
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They have gone on show until Monday at an exhibition on the life and works of artist Victor Noble Rainbird in the Old Low Light heritage centre on North Shields Fish Quay. |
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It was probably intended to compliment one of Verrazzano's noble friends. |
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King Henry even sent his son Henry to live in Becket's household, it being the custom then for noble children to be fostered out to other noble houses. |
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Joseph Radetzky von Radetz, born to a noble Czech family, was a field marshal and chief of the general staff of the Austrian Empire army during these wars. |
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Not all of the benefits of nobility derived from noble status per se. |
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The aim was noble, but the execution fails the mark in a work filled with misprints, typographic errors, and inclusion of hyphenations from a previous draft. |
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A Welshman of noble birth, Saint Petroc was educated in Ireland. |
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Conditions in Normandy were unsettled, as noble families despoiled the Church and Alan III of Brittany waged war against the duchy, possibly in an attempt to take control. |
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Ilsa, I'm no good at being noble, but it doesn't take much to see that the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world. |
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Warren notes, this Treaty began the practical dominance of the French king over France, and the ruler of the Angevin Empire was no longer the dominating noble in France. |
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At the time of his death, he was by far the richest noble in England. |
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In Spain, noble titles are now equally heritable by females and males. |
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Oftentimes younger members of noble families entered into trade. |
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Tertius Noble, Edward Bairstow, Francis Jackson, and Philip Moore. |
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However, heraldry has never been restricted to the noble classes in most countries, and being armigerous does not necessarily demonstrate nobility. |
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Arms of Charles, Infant of Spain, Archduke of Austria, Duke of Burgundy, KG at the time of his installation as a knight of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. |
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