Rosalinda, who was also invited to Prince Orlofsky's party, arrives there, masked, affecting the airs of a Hungarian countess. |
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Having befriended the monstrous Lelio, she agrees to rescue him from the marital clutches of a middle-aged countess by wooing the lady herself. |
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Meantime the people in England gave him up for lost, and the hand of the wealthy and beautiful countess became the aim of the greedy courtiers. |
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The guest list includes a countess, a World War I hero, a British matinee idol and an American film producer who makes Charlie Chaplin movies. |
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Pole was a younger son of the countess of Salisbury, and was therefore of the blood royal. |
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I like being a countess, especially if it means slaveys to run my bath and fan me with peacock feathers! |
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He marries a wealthy, foolish widow, the countess of Lyndon, and takes her name. |
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None of the dogs belonging to either the duke and duchess or the earl and countess ever barked. |
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Mahmood met the countess, married to Prince Edward, at her public relations firm in April. |
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In pretending to be a baron and a countess, the pair pokes fun at rigid class structures and upper-crust, titled society. |
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His chief patrons were the Sidney family, the earl of Pembroke, the countess of Bedford, and the duke and duchess of Newcastle. |
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The dowager countess will be there and you can bet no one will rest until everything is perfect. |
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In addition to bread the earl and countess received a quart of beer, a quart of wine, half a chine of mutton or a chine of boiled beef. |
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Rosalinda, who was also invited to the party, arrives there, affecting the airs of a Hungarian countess. |
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She reclaimed her title of countess and turned the decaying ancestral family seat into a house for homeless children at Wilsickow north of Berlin. |
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The earl and countess arrived in Devizes from two earlier engagements in Wiltshire, a visit to the Wessex MS Therapy Centre in Warminster and another engagement in Westbury. |
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You did see the marchioness spill her drink on the countess. |
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In the end, she turned out to be countess Eve Hanska, a Polish aristocrat living in Ukraine. |
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The wives of a king, prince, duke, marquess, earl, viscount and baron are queen, princess, duchess, marchioness, countess, viscountess and baroness respectively. |
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In 1902, Mercy dArgenteau, the Princess de Montyglyon, a Belgian countess and hereditary princess of the Holy Roman Empire, journeyed to St. Petersburg, Russia. |
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The countess, who is is the official patron of the charity's 18th birthday, joined Esther on a visit to its Yorkshire and North East headquarters in Leeds yesterday. |
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She was born in 1932, the oldest of eight children of the earl and countess of Longford. |
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He died in comparative poverty, but was buried in Westminster Abbey, where Lady Anne Clifford, countess of Dorset, paid for his handsome monument. |
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The earl and countess were then shown around the extended flats. |
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Lagercrantz's was editor-in-chief of Sweden's leading quality newspaper, and his grandmother was a countess. |
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Also present were Andrew and his daughter Princess Beatrice, and the Earl and countess of Wessex. |
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The Royal visit by the Earl and countess of Wessex to the territory raised tensions in Spain. |
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The countess deftly steered the lifeboat, a resolute and unlikely vision in her ermine and pearls. |
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He called up his mother, the dowager countess, and asked her to come over and look after the children. |
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The countess, whose husband was held by King Edward in the Tower of London, advised him to surrender. |
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Saint-Pardoux was founded because Margaret of Burgundy, countess of Limoges, wishing to make reparation for a less than virtuous life, left in her will a considerable sum of money for a Dominican monastery at this place. |
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I took advantage of a moment when I found myself alone with her to tell her that we could not come back for tea again and the countess said that we should be patient with her and that we'll soon continue our conversation. |
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Established in 1922 by a blind countess and run by Franciscan Sisters, the institution has become famous for its work and is visited by many foreign scholars. |
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In 2010 Fellowes created and produced Downton Abbey, which began following the fortunes of more than a dozen major characters, from the earl and countess of Grantham down to the scullery maid, in the pre-World War I period. |
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It's rather like seeing a countess begging in the gutter. |
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Maudit and his countess were taken to Kenilworth Castle and held until a ransom was paid. |
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The countess had been widowed in 1261 and became the wealthiest female in the British Islands who was not a member of a royal family. |
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In 1293, lying on her death bed, the countess sold the island to Edward I for 6,000 marks. |
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Jo is devastated until she finds out that he has left his entire estate to the duplicitous countess. |
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The countess took the roseate palm and snowy fingers of this lovely child. |
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The widowed countess dismissed Hobbes but he soon found work, again as a tutor, this time to Gervase Clifton, the son of Sir Gervase Clifton, 1st Baronet. |
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