They cooked up a feast of scones with jam and cream, fruit cake, sponge cake, and Anzac biscuits. |
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Up there in Nunavut, it's either feast or famine, lexicographically speaking. |
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For the region's playgroups and nurseries it has been a feast of babies, bonnets and bunnies in the lead-up to Easter. |
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The rich dish was served on feast days such as All Saints' Day, Christmas, and New Year's Day. |
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The day of the coronation was appointed for the day January 29, during the feast of Candlemas. |
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By the same token, neglecting to share a feast indicated an absence of ties, and exclusion from the feasting community meant rejection. |
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To celebrate Id al-Fitr, Moslems say the special feast prayer in a community format and give special alms to the poor. |
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Enacted at Paris, in the year of grace 1221, in the month of February, on the sabbath after the feast of St. Matthew the apostle. |
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It was therefore fitting that on the feast of the Assumption, the Church, dedicated to Our Lady, was packed to overflowing. |
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Not only will you have a feast for the eyes, but you'll be assuaging my guilt into the bargain. |
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Audiences will be treated to a feast of humour and stunning visual effects in a non-stop, action-packed event for the whole family to enjoy. |
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If anyone showed up or someone stayed late at night, a feast would be easily prepared. |
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The tiny mollusks, called orchid or bush snails, feast on surface or lateral roots that would otherwise keep the exotic blooms upright. |
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Tomorrow is the feast day of St Piran, the patron saint of Cornwall, and Sunday is Mothering Sunday. |
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The carcass of an Embolotherium would have provided a feast for a gathering of Andrewsarchus 37 million years ago. |
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It is endlessly fascinating, utterly compelling and a feast for the eye with fountains, churches, palaces and ancient monuments at every turn. |
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According to the philosophy, each meal should be a feast for all of your senses. |
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Tooting is preparing itself for a feast of Eastern delight to celebrate the culture of the Asian subcontinent. |
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Furthermore, a stroll around the campus offers a visual feast you don't have to be a fine artist to appreciate. |
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And this season's contest, to be held on March 29 at Percy Road, should be no different with a feast of rugby set to be on offer. |
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They are men and women in blue, numbering 15, and all set to treat you to a feast of a comic opera. |
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Days like this one are memorable when a large group is treated to such a feast of fine golf. |
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The Party was then treated to a feast of food, which was thoroughly enjoyed by all. |
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And for our listeners this morning, we have a delectation of delights, a feast of fantasies. |
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The general public and international visitors were treated to a feast of squash that has left them hungry for more. |
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There was even a nice crop of berries and some fruit trees nearby and they had quite the feast for their meal. |
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He also wishes to extend to you an invitation to dine with him at a feast of dancing and delights. |
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The feast of Apatouria involves the induction of infants, youths and wives into the phratry, or clan of families. |
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Herein, an incomparable trove of creepy-crawlies that would like to feast on you for lunch. |
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All combined to create a feast of entertainment for the packed audiences who attended over both nights. |
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In the course of the evening, you get a thriller, a comedy, a drama, and a farce, which, together, add up to a feast of first-class theatre. |
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It is a visual feast of the highest quality, the vibrant colour of the crowd scenes contrasting with the breath-taking beauty of the mountains. |
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The leaves and rubbish that collect around the base harbour insects for geckos to feast on, while providing cover from predators. |
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This coming Saturday is St. David's Day, the feast day of the patron saint of Wales. |
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The feast begins with a few hunks of soft onion bread and a thimbleful of an intensely rich roasted-eggplant garlic spread. |
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Excursions here ranged from parasailing and a cross-island four-wheel-drive adventure to a Tahitian feast and a whale-watching cruise. |
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Put a bright summer cloth on the table with a vase of flowers and serve your feast with barbecue relish, chutney and tomato sauce. |
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After a citywide culinary feast hosted at 25 area homes, more than sweet tooths flocked to South Side's Terminal Building for dessert and drinks. |
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The lord in the gospel parable of the wedding feast told his servants to fill his table by compelling people to come in. |
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Epiphany is a feast of revelation, the day Christ made his being known to the world. |
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Bread should be a feast to the eye as well, and Jaro had spent hours carving roses and suchlike on them. |
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Some say that Ecclesiastes is read at the feast of Succoth, a harvest holiday, to teach people to despise mundane matters as vanity. |
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He hadn't considered this, and a page attending a feast as anything but a servant for his master was highly irregular. |
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After copious amounts of champers it was to the Grove in Balham and a tasty feast around a huge round table in the middle of the restaurant. |
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The man widely dubbed the New Blair faced the original Blair yesterday at Westminster's weekly feast and ceremonial. |
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And if you knew the north east you would know we feast on nothing but stotty cakes, tatey pot and pease pudding! |
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It was a grand affair, with troop parades, poems, songs, a feast and the unveiling of a trophy. |
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The menus presented offered a tempting feast of gourmet food, and that was just the starters. |
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The hangi is a feast that may only be prepared in the regions of the country where there are hot springs. |
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The caterers came through again for dinner, with a New Zealand-style hangi and seafood feast on the water's edge. |
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It was said that if the weather was fair on the mid-winter feast day of Candlemas then winter would return in force. |
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It was a feast to eyes of the observer watching people eat baked water chestnuts. |
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I started my feast with a half-disc of Camembert that was breaded and fried, served with a side of cranberry sauce. |
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Book jackets nowadays are an art form, and browsing through a bookstore is a feast for the eyes. |
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Seeking direction, Bernard made a novena in preparation for the feast of the Immaculate Conception. |
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The end of the period of squiredom is often celebrated with a feast organized by the family of the squire or by the Tutor Knight himself. |
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The journey began in the South African Airways exclusive business class lounge at Johannesburg Airport with a feast of free beer and food. |
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One theme treated several times in his voluminous writings was whether laymen and women should be allowed to dance in churchyards on feast days. |
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Indeed water in all its diverse forms has been mainly responsible for the visual feast that lies ahead. |
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It's a fragrant, non-fattening feast for the senses that can also be absolutely affordable, if the flowers come right from your own back yard. |
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Colourful petunias, vincas, celosias, dahlias and so on offer a feast to the eyes. |
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It is at pains to point out that much of the ceremony took place during the Christmas vigil and on the feast of the Nativity. |
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The non-availability of chairs did not discourage them from enjoying the feast all day. |
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What with ripened berries, snails, slugs and insects, there was a veritable feast on offer. |
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Almost four centuries ago, the Pilgrims celebrated a harvest feast to thank God after suffering through a brutal winter. |
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Carpeted floor, tables set with crisp white cloths and large, comfortable, blue velveteen chairs set the stage for the tasty feast ahead. |
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After our huge feast the day prior, we didn't feel like going out and I was happy to veg out and do nothing. |
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Fruits like the star-apple, the soursop, the five-finger, the pomerac, the papaya, make a delicate feast for discerning palates. |
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Once night falls and your enemies switch from the mundane to the nightmarish, the game becomes a dark feast for the senses. |
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If self-restraint at the feast isn't one of your virtues, a walk in the brisk air may help undo what you've overdone. |
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At the feast which follows the three bridegrooms wager on whose wife is the most docile and submissive. |
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A genuine artist, his fiery, passionate nature carried over to his work and transformed it into a feast for the senses that captured the soul. |
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Fill your lungs with purifying air and feast your eyes on Mother Nature's bounty. |
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They expected, not unreasonably, to be treated to a glorious feast of rampant action, and instead were left feeling bored and cheated. |
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Seven days thou shalt eat unleavened bread, and in the seventh day shall be a feast to The Lord. |
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A massive feast of sloppy joes and a night of drinking beer by the camp fire get us ready for tomorrow's race. |
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The three-course feast concluded with a grand ice cream bombe topped with sparklers. |
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Sizzling on the table, a nabe can be the best feast you can have on a cold winter day. |
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Since the feast is movable, the changes are often made to avoid Easter week conflicts. |
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It was here that the notion of Vote for Change as a moveable multi-artist feast first began to germinate. |
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The feast is overflowing with pork, delivered whole on spits from underground umu ovens. |
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He used typology and symbols in the furnishings of the tabernacle, the 7 feast days, as well as people. |
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With sylvan surroundings, the falls covered with tall lush green forest trees and salubrious climate is a feast to eyes. |
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Pork and turtle are feast foods, with chicken also being reserved for special occasions. |
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On feast days, and other special days, the Lay Reader will also wear a tunicle over his or her alb. |
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The clip is included among the feast of DVD extras, alternative mixes and live recordings that accompany this multimedia anniversary edition. |
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The only time to tuck a napkin into a shirt front is when you are a guest at a crab feast or picnic. |
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Mary appeared again at the marriage feast at Cana, and initiated the first miracle attributed to Jesus. |
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Begin the meal with a salad, feast on the stew, then finish with simple mango sorbet or lime sherbet. |
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The whole castle was in a flurry of excitement and preparation for the midwinter feast which was to be celebrated in a week. |
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For two years we got along wonderfully as friends, until the night of the midwinter feast five years ago. |
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Green also became associated with this feast day because it is the colour of spring, Ireland and the shamrock. |
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A midnight feast was demanded and provided, in an exasperated but tolerant manner. |
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Meanwhile, over at the town hall, music fans have a feast of concerts lined up next weekend. |
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But natural gardeners welcome such beneficials as ladybugs, lacewings and syrphids in their garden because they love to feast on aphids. |
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Traditionally, a feast called a potlatch was held whenever a new totem pole was raised. |
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Brass candle stands can be perfect if you were to feast your beloved with a candle light dinner. |
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St Michael next means the next feast of St Michael or Michaelmas, which is the 29th September. |
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It rips open bee trees to feast on honey, honeycombs, bees, and larvae, and will tear apart rotting logs for grubs, beetles, crickets, and ants. |
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Well, we met on Thursday and ate a feast of sashimi, tofu, salad and they ate meaty stuff. |
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I love Whole Foods because it presents itself as a feast of sensualism, rather than dour vegetarianism or consumerism. |
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Marine invertebrates feast on the wood, attracting other creatures from little fish, to birds and sharks. |
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Now, add all those specialised magazines, and you have a virtual feast of news, gossip, tidbits, and more. |
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Christmas was soon complemented by the feast of the Presentation of Christ in the Temple, forty days after his birth. |
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All virtuality is a Barmecide feast and Internet is virtuality par excellence. |
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I wanted them to feast at the banquet of life's recreations, to have the Renaissance childhood not provided to me. |
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And then you get to feast on the best Mexican food the desert has to offer at our Fiesta Dinner, complete with mariachis! |
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William built a motte and bailey castle on Pevensey Bay and held a feast to celebrate the Normans' safe arrival. |
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More importantly, the feast was a ceremonial manifestation of the warfaring nature of society. |
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A feast had been laid out but was soon demolished, amidst much handshaking, backslapping and reminiscences. |
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The mirasis sang wedding songs throughout the ' ladies ' sangeet ' night and the entire village was invited to a feast at our house the next day. |
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This particular feast is unobtainable here, but there are plenty of other good things authentically evocative of Turkey. |
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The system, which is audible over a wide area, will also play suitable music for church feast days. |
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The exhibition is a feast of eye candy, a lush banquet of colour, depth and intensity. |
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Unsurprisingly, Godwin includes a snippet on St Valentine's day, which evolved out of the ancient Roman feast of Lupercalia. |
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Attached to the rustic old country house hotel was a gallery and a deli where we bought a mid-morning feast of focaccia, Persian feta and relish. |
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The feast celebrated in the Byzantine calendar as the Dormition on 15 August became the Assumption and Coronation of the Virgin in the west. |
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Every city or town also celebrates the feast day of its patron saint with processions, dancing, and bullfights. |
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On August 15, we will celebrate the feast of Mary's Assumption into heaven. |
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After having come off another slow period I decided that a small part-time job might help to temper the feast or famine cycle. |
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We could even recover the love feast from the early church and really start to see eating together as part of our discipleship. |
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A fine occasion for joining was Michaelmas, or another rural feast such as Easter or Walpurgis night. |
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Polar bears are seagoing hunters that roam vast areas of the Arctic, pursuing a movable feast of seals, narwhals, beluga whales, and walruses. |
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It's either feast or famine for the fragile Canadian feature-film industry. |
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However, this still is a team driven by power, which means it often will be feast or famine. |
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St Hilary's feast day on 13 th January has gained the reputation of being the coldest day of the year. |
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This event is being shared by over 40 countries and here in Sligo the line up is one to feast your eyes on. |
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The quetzals have nowhere to go, so they nest in tree cavities within easy reach of the toucans who feast on quetzal eggs and chicks. |
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There is a tea room for drinks and snacks and you can even feast your eyes on some of the displays set out there too. |
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It is also the ghost at the feast of much polite society in Northern Ireland. |
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In ancient times, before a battle, a general would feast his soldiers with alcohol and meat. |
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The love feast was quite different from other religious practices of the day. |
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To recover they need to feast on conkers, acorns and sweet chestnuts, which is why visitors are exhorted not to gather these items. |
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The Olympic Games is a festival of nationalism, a gourmandising 17-day feast of jingo. |
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Without supervision, the goat will gobble the cabbage whereas the wolf will not hesitate to feast on the goat. |
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Back on the original path, this album is a feast of rain stick, electronics, cymbal reverb, soft percussion and backwards dissolves. |
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Churches began celebrating the Eucharist in the morning and hosting the love feast in the evening. |
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They were once so numerous that the town kept the feast of St Crispin on October 25, patron saint of cobblers. |
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There was a procession through the village, and a feast given for all the folk as a gift of the hand of Godwulf. |
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One is the feast of St. Leonard, the patron saint of livestock, who is honored each November with festive horse-and-cart parades. |
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Artifacts, pictures, and descriptive material about the love feast will be featured in this extensive exhibit. |
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The giant puff-ball is a feast in itself, and I remember a huge one found by a shepherd of the wolds near Loughborough. |
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The lamb is divine, and the feast includes crab claws, soup, homemade scones and rhubarb tart. |
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We'll see if, like his brother, Stephen can feast on Indy League pitching before making a rapid ascent to the bigs. |
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In the window, right before one's very eyes, one could feast on the vision of hot dogs and knishes sizzling on the grill. |
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The biggest holiday among Basques is the feast of their patron saint, Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order. |
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A red-letter day is important, like the feast days marked in red in church calendars. |
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Not everyone feels the need to celebrate the feast day of St Valentine. |
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On October 4, the feast day of Saint Francis of Assisi, the contemporary Francis traveled to the birthplace of his namesake. |
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Lunch finally arrives, this time not a sumptuous feast but fish wrapped in a military newspaper distributed on U.S. bases. |
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The Pilgrim Fathers thanked the Wampanoag Indians for their hospitality over a three-day feast in 1621, then proceeded to drive them ruthlessly off their native lands. |
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It always ends with death whether it is the death of our prey and our subsequent feast or the tragic death of a pack member, caught by the horns of an elk or trampled by deer. |
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His TV Dinner was a feast of curiosities enmeshed with the everyday, a meal that leaves one feeling slightly queasy, even overstuffed, but eager for more. |
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The author's uncompromising critical insights and acerbic style, both humorous and original, make the reading of this work a feast for both the mind and soul. |
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He told them how the islands in the distance had once been water nymphs, but he'd transformed them to islands because they forgot to include him in a feast they had. |
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The voter would leave the poll to the jeers and threats of those who disapproved of his answer, but fortified by thoughts of the feast to come from his grateful patrons. |
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In the depths of the winter, the windigo seeks to feast on human flesh. |
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It is an agape feast in the sense that God's love is shared, not only among the participants but also with those who eat and drink and those who are hungry in the world. |
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The mythic origin of the feast was the creation of the world by the god Marduk. |
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Because feast days in such almanacs and calendars were frequently written or printed in red, a red-letter day came to be a term for one that was special. |
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The Welsh laid down their weapons for the feast but the drunken merry making came to a dramatic halt when William challenged them never again to bear arms in his domains. |
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And once we had a true feast in the little mill house, finer by far than I had ever had at the Priory, even at Lammas when the first harvest was brought in late Summer. |
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Meads defines the term banquet precisely, pointing out that a banquet served as a light repast or perhaps the final course of a feast rather than a feast in itself. |
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The feast of this day is called the Annunciation of our Lady. |
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The Sacrament of Reconciliation will be celebrated in Bonniconlon Parish Church on Thursday, March 25th at 8pm, the feast of the Annunciation of the Lord. |
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Then feast your ears on this 1969 Bill Cosby routine about drugging and seducing women. |
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The feast is an annual event that brings together hundreds of vegetarians and non-vegetarians to enjoy life-affirming food in a wonderful social setting. |
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At the feast for Shiva, for example, villagers prepare a huge, steamed rice cake made in the shape of a lingam and stuffed with cheese, molasses, and coconut. |
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Here we have music for the feast of the Ascension, all scrupulously edited with additions carefully formed from an understanding of the practices of the time. |
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The sheer size and length of the feast and our own gluttony had saved us from walking straight into an ambush. |
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On the first night of their honeymoon cruise, Betty and Dean enjoyed a Lucullan feast of champagne, salmon pate, lobster, and caviar in the ship's elegant dining room. |
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As those flowers of early spring begin to fade the azaleas and rhododendrons and later flowering cherry trees in parks and home gardens provide a feast of colour. |
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As if all this were not enough, she also plies participants with a delicious feast of teacakes, sandwiches, scones and cakes created from period recipes. |
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Not only is it busy movement-wise, the stage is a feast of visuals, with a blocky, retro cityscape pattern backdropping the slinky white and black costumes of the dancers. |
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For this, adults and children all over the kingdom were getting ready for the feast at night, making great mountains of cakes, scones and all other kinds of goodies. |
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Along the way, sample unique foods such as partridgeberries and bakeapples while savoring your lobster feast and all the fresh seafood your heart desires. |
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Residents of the town will be able to use a free shuttle bus to take them up to the auction mart where there will be a feast of food and rural produce. |
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This essay will explore both the feast and the season of Martinmas as interdependent phenomena, both under the aegis of the great bishop of Tours. |
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She arranges a Thyestean feast for her ex-hubby and his new wife. |
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Today, on her feast day, streets from Key West to East L.A. fill with processions honoring her. |
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It felt like a boarding school midnight feast from an Enid Blyton novel. |
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The feast of the Transfiguration, so venerated by the Orthodox Church, serves as a key to the understanding of the humanity of Christ in the Eastern tradition. |
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Look through that PDF I just linked to and feast on the meager amounts earmarked for democracy and assistance programs. |
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So we celebrated with a little feast of bilberries and then sank on to the comfortable cushions of these shrubs for a celebratory snooze in the sunshine. |
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And then she asks that the wedding feast be cooked without a mite of salt. |
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Thespians from the North Kerry area are set to tread the boards yet again in what promises to be a side-splitting feast of comedy drama for audiences. |
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Free from the shackles of relegation, there was the tantalising prospect of uncaged tigers released to feast and relieve their frustration on the home side. |
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There's a feast of films vying for moviegoers' attention this season. |
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I think the robins and bluebirds will appreciate the feast they offer. |
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Throw in a half dozen festivals featuring everything from country and bluegrass to jazz and blues and you have an unparalleled musical feast in Alberta. |
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It is a feast of boleros delivered with flair by Ferrer, who intuitively conjures up the elegance and languid energy of that post-war singing style. |
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Because her children are not turkey fans, Judith created a Thanksgiving feast focusing on cranberry stuffed pork loin that is slathered with a garlic-onion jam. |
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Their diet consists primarily of bony fishes and small sharks, including young bull sharks, but they have been known to feast on everything from seabirds to dogs. |
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The Greek Orthodox calendar has many feast days, fast days, and name days. |
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Sipping tea before the botanic feast of flowers and trees that surrounds the bowling green, the men and women in white were perplexed by the slurs. |
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It's down-home and never highfalutin, slow-cooked and eaten fast, a sometimes sweet and always smoky feast that fills the gut as it feeds the soul. |
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The wonderfully fresh seafood and Pan-Asian flavors you find are a feast for the senses. |
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Whatever the truth of the matter, the grace is faithfully repeated annually at Burns Suppers across the land before the feast of haggis, neeps and tatties begins. |
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Birds, fish and mammals feast on the barnacles, snails, urchins and other animals that vary from tiny shore crabs to spectacular giant green anemones. |
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The official celebration of the saint's feast day began the evening before at vespers and was followed by an early morning mass in the baptistery. |
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His marimba and vibes contribute further percussive accents, and the intricate multiple meters and contrapuntal figures add up to a rhythmic feast for the listener. |
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The vita notes that after receiving the requisite approbations for the new feast from church officials, Juliana chose John, still a monk at Mont-Cornillon, as her partner. |
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Consider, natural instinct tells an ant that it has to collect enough food in summer into its secure burrows beneath the earth to feast on during the chilly winter. |
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They sought to transform such pagan revelries into the feast of Christ's circumcision, a calendrical amputation that proved spectacularly unsuccessful. |
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Streamers of wispy cloud trundled elegantly past the window as if they were clearing the screen so that our eyes could feast on our very own slice of clear star-studded sky. |
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Mr Allen's sermon was on the feast of Candlemas, which fell on Sunday. |
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The courtesans gathered, musicians played, and a feast like none had before witnessed was prepared to welcome back the Prince and to celebrate old man Clemantini. |
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The Christmas tree, for example, harks back to a northern Germanic fertility festival and feast of the dead when greenery was hung up in the home to warn off evil spirits. |
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After a sumptuous feast in the morning, men and children go to the riverside and with due ceremonial worship offer a cocoasut to the God of water, Varuna. |
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The sumptuous feast ended with a note of caution on how not to overeat. |
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Youngsters dined on a feast of turkey, sausage, roast potatoes, carrots, peas, stuffing and gravy, followed by a choice of Christmas pudding and custard or ice-cream. |
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The feast of Santiago on 25 July is a national holiday, as is the feast of the Immaculate Conception, 8 December, which is also Spain's Mother's Day. |
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The family day takes place on Sunday, with a feast of underage football, bouncing castle, glamorous granny competition, bonny baby competition etc. |
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The peppers' smoky-sweet flavor makes a satisfying feast out of any meal. |
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The wedding feast is the highpoint of any marriage function. |
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On the same night that the game's elite were tucking into a feast at the champions dinner, here was Daly selling merchandise over the counter of his ramshackle trailer. |
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Twelve students from years nine and ten cooked up a feast of Asian treats for members of staff, with retiring head teacher John Roberts among those tucking in. |
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The room is a feast of gilt and opulent yellow-patterned fabrics, and it has a floor of aged, biscuit-brown polished wood rather than the almost inescapable blond parquet. |
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In Italy, spring offers a feast of events for the art lover. |
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For your pleasure is a feast of the finest entertainers in the land! |
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The day of the assassination bid was also the feast of Our Lady of Fatima. |
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I know that the Mayor of Pisa, if he had any say in it at all, would like the tower to be reopened in June next year to coincide with the feast of their patron saint. |
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Each province has at least one local festival of its own, usually on the feast of its patron saint, so that there is always a fiesta going on somewhere in the country. |
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On February 14th is celebrated the feast of two saints named Valentine. |
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I have bats upstairs who will feast tonight, and that's good. |
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It was at these capitals where the chief would feast his people after collecting very beautiful and attractive sand, which he spread around the palace. |
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It's feast or famine at golf clubs and we're feasting at the moment. |
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As 21 October was the feast day of Saint Ursula and the Eleven Thousand Virgins, he named the cape in their honor. |
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There are also lessons appointed for the feast days of numerous saints and commemorations. |
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This feast of other-worldly entertainment is based on the books Eric by Terry Pratchett and The Antipope by Robert Rankin. |
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Worship can be varied for special events like baptisms or weddings in the service or significant feast days. |
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It represented an optical illusion of the leftovers from a feast on the floor of reach houses. |
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In 1997 the monastery was reconsecrated, and the feast of St Shenoute is celebrated by hundreds of thousands of Copts annually. |
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Later, when he was venerated in England, he was either commemorated after Augustine on 26 May, or his feast was moved to 27 May. |
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One reason for this may be that he died on the feast day of Augustine of Canterbury. |
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The accusation occurred in front of the bishop of Hexham, Wilfrid, who was present at a feast when some drunken monks made the accusation. |
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The hostile sorcerer incants his spell whilst placing his foot on a grave in the cemetery of the feast hamlet. |
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With Christmas and Thanksgiving coming up, the Atlantan has plans for a holiday feast with her loved ones. |
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Recently returned from the Far East, Dave Myers and Simon King served up a feast of felafels. |
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A feast inside a Mandan lodge, art by George Catlin, showing the four pillars supporting the roof and the smoke hole, ca. |
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Gildas is the patron saint of several churches and monasteries in Brittany, and his feast day is celebrated on 29 January. |
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The feast of the firstfruits of thy land thou shalt bring into the house of the Lord thy God. |
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More than a hundred people turned up at the Malate church in Manila for the annual event held near the feast day of St Francis of Assisi. |
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It followed the feast of Beltane, celebrating the sun's life-generating powers, while Samhain beckoned to winter and the dark nights ahead. |
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Drawn by cows, the chariot travels through the countryside, and wherever the goddess visits, a great feast is held. |
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President George Bush's justification for the Iraq war was a barmecidal feast and Sen. |
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We indulge in the five-course Polynesian feast and drink Mai Tais while reminiscing about our adventures. |
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Today the shade was being enjoyed by a herd of torpid earthpigs, gorged on a feast of ants. |
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The sailfish arrive at the Isla Mujeres in Mexico every year to feast on the migrating sardines. |
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Lacklustre graphics, violent slapstick and poorly judged jokes about lazy eyes are presented in a flavourless feast of funlessness. |
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Some of the soldiers who survived the battle and returned to Cebu were poisoned while attending a feast given by Humabon. |
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The Saint Andrew's Cross was worn as a badge on hats in Scotland, on the day of the feast of Saint Andrew. |
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Since this week's other Onegins include Roberto Bolle, David Hallberg and Cory Stearns, Ballet Theatre balletomanes have a feast ahead of them. |
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The feast of Andrew is observed on 30 November in both the Eastern and Western churches, and is the national day of Scotland. |
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The Georgian Orthodox Church marks two feast days in honor of Saint Andrew, on 12 May and 13 December. |
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Andrew at Patras in a special shrine and are revered in a special ceremony every 30 November, his feast day. |
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These penitential ceremonies occur in some villages in Lower Brittany on the feast day of the parish's saint. |
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Labour proposed the creation of four new bank holidays, marking the feast days of the patron saints of the United Kingdom's constituent nations. |
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The palliums are blessed on the eve of the feast then kept in a silver-gilt casket near the tomb of St Peter. |
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On December 12, the feast day of this Virgin, freestyle cliff divers jump into the sea to honor her. |
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Its date coincides with an Aztec feast celebrating Tlaloc and Chalchiuhtlicue, the gods of rain and water. |
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Julie Stevenson Bromley, Kent AEASTER is called a moveable feast because it is not celebrated on the same date every year. |
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So why shouldn't we create more of these moveable feast zones for the fish and fishermen? |
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The Frankie rug features repeating geometric squares that take twists and turns across the floor, creating an optical feast for the eyes. |
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Candlemas originally fell on 2 February, the day of the feast of the Purification, or the Presentation of Christ. |
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Leaving aside the inclusion of Staite Murray's splendid pots, in a way the ghost at the feast in this exhibition is Alfred Wallis. |
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Green Monday is a movable feast that occurs on the seventh week before the Greek Orthodox Easter Sunday. |
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Although he describes the details of the Easter celebration as deriving from local custom, he insists the feast itself is universally observed. |
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It is often distributed on major feast days, or any time the clergy feel it necessary for the spiritual welfare of its congregation. |
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John the Wonderworker Orthodox Church hosted the event just across from Valley River Center to celebrate Theophany, an annual feast on Jan. |
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Because of its festal nature it is usually followed by a breakfast feast shared together by the congregation. |
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Lughnasa, called Calan Awst in Welsh, is a summer feast and was dedicated to the god Lug. |
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It Includes Observance of the Sunday as the day of the lord and other fast and feast days in church calendar. |
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Second on the list were pepperoni pizzas, followed by meat feast pizzas in third. |
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Capriccio Sunday Champagne Brunch is served in true Tuscan buffet style and is a veritable feast for the eyes and for the palate. |
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The feast day of Saint Gregory also serves as a commemorative day for the former pupils of Downside School, called Old Gregorians. |
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Mystery plays were presented in the porches of cathedrals or by strolling players on feast days. |
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George's feast day in England was no different from the numerous saints on the liturgical calendar until the Late Middle Ages. |
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The Roman Chronography of 354 then included an early reference to the celebration of a Nativity feast in December, as of the fourth century. |
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The latter is called the feast of 'six sesamum acts,' for sesamum is a holy plant, and in each act of this rite it plays a part. |
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A typical feast with foods such as borek and doner kebabs is shown and explained. |
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Mystery plays were presented on the porch of the cathedrals or by strolling players on feast days. |
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On great feast days, he wore embroidery and jewels on his clothing and shoes. |
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Once the buyei ascertains that the spirits of the ancestors are present, participants offer them a sumptuous feast of food and rum. |
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Britten was born in the fishing port of Lowestoft in Suffolk, on the east coast of England on 22 November 1913, the feast day of Saint Cecilia. |
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In 1693 Pope Innocent XII moved her feast day to 10 June in recognition of the birthdate of the son of James VII of Scotland and II of England. |
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The coronations of Charles II in 1661 and Anne in 1702 were on St George's Day, the feast of the patron saint of England. |
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Handel is honoured with a feast day on 28 July in the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church, with Johann Sebastian Bach and Henry Purcell. |
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They were killed after being betrayed at a feast at the hands of Rajah Humabon. |
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He is remembered liturgically on 13 June by the Episcopal Church, with a provisional feast day as adopted at the 2009 General Convention. |
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Here we feast or pick, as the case may be, at the smorgasbord of world-views pluralistically spread before us. |
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Each day in the liturgical year and each saint's feast day had a different blessing. |
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It started operation on 15 August 1845, feast day of the Assumption of the Virgin. |
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In 1488, shortly after succeeding to the throne, he held a massive feast for the Order of the Garter at the castle. |
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Pope Pius XI canonised More and Fisher on 19 May 1935, and More's feast day was established as 9 July. |
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Now on his son's birthday feast there came unto the king some five and fifty chosen men, schooled in the starlore of the Chaldaeans. |
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Also Vashti the queen made a feast for the women in the royal house which belonged to king Ahasuerus. |
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Bendigeidfran agrees to this, and a feast is held to celebrate the betrothal. |
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The main feast day is May 7, when the statue of the saint along with other saints is taken in procession around the church. |
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If, however, the feast occurs before Easter, it is celebrated on Easter Monday, instead. |
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