When prompted, you either say the phone number or speak the name of someone in the phone's address book. |
|
Goaded by leftist privacy advocates, Congress has been toying with the idea of regulating the private sector in the name of privacy. |
|
Meanwhile, I've gone through the archives with speed and alacrity, but still can't find the name of the hotel. |
|
Such nuptials were a union in name only, as only the king could recognize a marriage as valid. |
|
Women are subject to this discourse both in the name of religion as well as in the name of age-old customs and traditions. |
|
I like RBF because its putting a name to a thing people have been complaining to women about forever and sort of subverting it. |
|
If investments are made in the child's name absolutely, the child has control and can realise the assets whenever he or she wishes. |
|
The name comes from butyric acid, an acid that has the smell of rancid butter. |
|
I really liked saying her name but she had addressed me as Mr. Taylor so maybe I thought I should keep some what of a professional air about me. |
|
In Africa and parts of Indonesia, the game goes by the name Milo and points are scored differently. |
|
A hotwalker is the name given to the guy at a racetrack who walks hot horses around in a circle to cool them down. |
|
Was he afraid, do you think, of having potentially another name on the ballot besides his own? |
|
He suggests that I put it jointly in my name together with my wife and our two daughters to save CGT and stamp duty. |
|
The audience included young and old, soap stars and Shakespeareans, household names and the hard to put a name to. |
|
The BCR2600 series is microminiaturized with built-in decoder, smaller than half the size of a name card. |
|
His name is much in the news and on the op-ed pages these days, if you're looking out for it. |
|
Ornithologists will know that the strangely-named Indian Tree Pie takes its name from a colourful Indian member of the crow family. |
|
The common practice of mixed parents here seems to be to give any offspring a western first name and a Japanese middle name. |
|
Put the troll's name on a kill file to prevent that username from posting anything again. |
|
I think that he should name names if there is foundation in what he says, because I frankly resent being lumped in with everyone else. |
|
|
It is all done in the name of curbing the so-called bad actors, but it imposes costs on everyone. |
|
He made a name for himself as a rebuilder of failing enterprises and gained valuable experience in obtaining and handling capital. |
|
On one occasion, the spruiker refused point blank to tell me the name of the company he was representing. |
|
Give the name on the byline an italic touch, and somehow the visual rhythm of the text may be altered for the better. |
|
We also use organic aloe vera gel, sunflower oil, jojoba oil and tea tree oil, to name a few. |
|
She put her name to the single market, the bedrock of European union, and to several other fundamental agreements besides. |
|
Are we to jump to the conclusion, therefore, that they have abandoned the left in the name of pragmatism and realpolitik? |
|
His death was never avenged, even though the guilty party is known by name and affiliation. |
|
My family's name has been besmirched by your victory over me, but your trickery can't hope to save you now. |
|
Now air ambulance bosses intend to name the new helicopter after their generous benefactor. |
|
If you don't, a bench warrant is issued with your name on it, and you face deportation. |
|
His name was so prominent in the play-by-play that you started to look around for Stills and Nash. |
|
It means fighting against sexism and its manifestations in areas such as people's attitudes and opinions, advertising and the law, to name a few. |
|
Yahveh, the God of the Israelites who revealed his name to Moses, was Yahveh Sabaoth, the God of armies. |
|
His good name has been smeared by the tabloids but his films still shine through with a unique and often brilliant vision. |
|
By midnight, everyone was on the dance floor, jiving to a number Archie knew he'd heard several times, but couldn't quite place a name on. |
|
He stared intently at the magistrates' bench and his defence solicitor throughout the case and spoke only to confirm his name and address. |
|
He didn't have a clue who I was, so was quite shocked when I leant across to recite his name and address. |
|
Our children will have 2 middle names, my last name being the second, and his last name. |
|
So Chalo became a reality this year and the school has a global view and approach just as its name implies in Bemba. |
|
|
References are made to the recipient's domain name and email address to give the message the smack of authenticity. |
|
Apart from his improper and shabby looks, his weird name became the object of her cruel jokes. |
|
I received several of these messages from another scammer going by the name Brian Mercy. |
|
It goes by the name of perspectivism or situatedness or social constructionism. |
|
The name was chosen somewhat whimsically by a Florida law enforcement officer, an agency official said. |
|
I rechecked every media source in the country but they all said his name was John. |
|
When my sister was a little girl she asked my mother the name of a certain old lady. |
|
In the future I will read any article that has your name in its byline with a very critical eye indeed! |
|
I have recently taken the advice of a charlatan going by the name of Dr. Spinola. |
|
As far as the actual game goes, I have acquired a new personal hero who goes by the name of Roque Santa Cruz. |
|
York is a so-called Beacon Council, a name that suggests it would have qualified for extra funding. |
|
Are we aware of evil's reality yet blind to its force and effects, unable to name and describe it? |
|
The company offers a variety of services, including Website design, Web hosting, domain name registration, and e-business consulting. |
|
Yet I want all the stories to be right there, at a glance, preferably with the author's name and a title for the story. |
|
The horse in question, racing in India under the name China Man, was disqualified from the victory. |
|
Foes Racing is a name which springs to mind whenever big bikes and big forks are mentioned. |
|
He named the property Asgaard, the name given to the home of the ancient Norse gods. |
|
The Fall Highweight, as its name suggests, challenges horses to carry heavier weights than most North American races today. |
|
Over the last number of weeks, the theatre has been undergoing a radical transformation in the name of theatre. |
|
It is in fact, her name being called by the dying man in the waking world, where the whiteness of his face is likened to the snow of her dream. |
|
|
The director, an Argentinian who lives in Brazil, made his name in the West with the understated prison movie Kiss of the Spider Woman. |
|
The merchants then aged the wine, bottled and sold it around the world often featuring the merchant's name prominently. |
|
These unique steering wheel key rings are made from stainless steel and can be personalized with your name or initials. |
|
As its name suggests, this is a powerful force of attraction that operates between all protons and neutrons. |
|
Fancy having the name of your favourite celebrity totty spelled out in naked people? |
|
I am excessively, and, perhaps, stupidly, proud of the fact that there is not a whiff of scandal about the name of any cricketer from Bangalore. |
|
The name conjures images of coiled rattlers ready to lash out with deadly fangs. |
|
Waiting for her at the gate was the neighbour's tabby tomcat who bore the unoriginal name of Tiger. |
|
When the mudthrowing and name calling becomes nasty, then you know a raw nerve has been prodded. |
|
Princess, a gray tabby, ran away, the bell on her pink collar that bore her name jingling. |
|
Long ago, when he was just a schoolboy, his closest friend had gone by the name St. James. |
|
I remember when Pearl was at high school, there was this one guy who went by the name Jim Silk. |
|
Mark had learnt, during their talk that the man's name was Joseph but everyone referred to him as Josh, and he was extremely agitated. |
|
Neither the common nor the Latin name give any indication that the hacking cough and haunting whoop are often followed by vomiting. |
|
Instead I lay incapacitated, overwhelmed by the sensation I am now able to give the name micropsia. |
|
The hints and whispers pointed ever more to Kelly, who friends say believed his name would be kept out of the row. |
|
But I am sorry that, in the name of health, we can be dictated to with scarcely a whisper of protest. |
|
Only a handful of countries, mostly poverty-stricken, recognize the Republic of China, the official name used by Taiwan, as a country. |
|
Nadeau, as his name would indicate, has no love for informants and rejects the notion that he was a rat. |
|
He was a stout older Scot by the name of Ian, with whiskers of a beard, and a rough voice, but had a kind heart. |
|
|
An individual, whose name is marked with a double asterisk, gave a witness statement which was put in evidence under the Civil Evidence Act. |
|
If someone says the man's name in the comments, is the team legally in the poo? |
|
It is understood that they revealed the new name she was going to be using, possibly passport details and even clues to her new address. |
|
And perseverance is the name of the game for one to attain success and happiness. |
|
To this I wish Cllr Clarke well and hope she will help to carry on the Town Council's good name and work. |
|
Discretion is not their middle name and they give such a fiery display as to be considered suitably decorative for pot plant use. |
|
She walked from her offices at MTV into Times Square and people shrieked her name and bayed for her autograph. |
|
Keiji was so tired of going by false names and, a lot of the times, no name at all. |
|
The crowd cheered loudly as the host of the contest walked on stage with the name of the winning band in his hand. |
|
Just the name conjures up images of leather-bound books, mahogany desks and some old chap mulling over life in the comfort of his wing chair. |
|
She cleared her throat and leaned forward slightly peering at the name tag attached to his bright orange monitor vest. |
|
Whenever he does call you a bad name or threatens to whip you or anything else, tell your mom ASAP and have her talk to him and again. |
|
As the route climbs out of Glen Nochty it passes an old house that goes by the curious name of Duffdefiance. |
|
For him it was always the issues that were important, but he was definitely rebuking his old friend, even though he did not name him. |
|
With a single keystroke, she erases his name from the title page and substitutes her own, before she sends it off. |
|
The reason I was going by my middle name was for that very reason, because he hated it. |
|
My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings, gaze on my work, ye mighty, and despair. |
|
The name of these birds comes from the vivid red coloring of the wing coverts. |
|
Police are trying to trace anyone the teenager may have spoken to on line and say he may have used the name DJ or possibly Dee Jay. |
|
As the name indicates, the eyes of the sleeper move back and forth at rapid speed during their sleep. |
|
|
We usually name public places and spaces after the big shots or big donors. |
|
If you're trying to get attention and separate yourself from the pack, picking a good name is one of the best moves you can make. |
|
There are plenty of celebrities who own racehorses but many avoid the limelight by keeping their name out of the racecards. |
|
Nevertheless, outside the rarefied ateliers of haute couture, few know his name today. |
|
As a lad, he used to race bikes and his brother blessed him with the name of Bob-man, which has stuck like glue ever since. |
|
A howler monkey screamed in the tree tops and frogs and cicadas and other creatures he could not name whistled and chirped in the dark. |
|
From songs neatly woven into the story's fabric to the dances that are performed with athletic ferocity, Minnelli's name is stamped all over it. |
|
In front of me is a copy of your book with the name spelt out clearly, but there's none so blind as those who will not see. |
|
Or if there is a weblink below the photographer's name you can try contacting them yourself if you prefer. |
|
And the Berkeley name for element 104, rutherfordium, was surely an honour due to one of the century's greatest nuclear physicists. |
|
The name given in the book was Victorine Le Normand but the famous fortune teller went under the name of Marie-Anne Adelaide Le Normand. |
|
You will be able to bring up the scoreboard, click to bring up a mouse cursor, and click on the name of the player you want to mute. |
|
Long rows of empty boots stretched across the plaza at the south end of the park, each pair tagged with the name of a fallen soldier. |
|
Stalinism crippled us by castrating our moral passion, blinding us to the wrongs done to men if those wrongs were done in the name of Communism. |
|
The cytoskeleton is the overall name given to protein filaments and motor proteins in the cell. |
|
A small ship with a big name and a big heart, she was obviously a source of immense pride for her new owner. |
|
That is why so many advertisements for products consist of nothing more than the name of the product and perhaps a smiling face. |
|
Russian silversmiths used a touch mark with the initial letters of first and last name in Cyrillic. |
|
His acting skills have never been strong, but Peter has made his name through pure lusty action. |
|
He gave us the name of a rabbi in New York who was an acknowledged expert in these questions. |
|
|
Its own name is of heraldic origin and refers to the three roses in a bend on the shield of the counts of Wasserburg. |
|
A multi-instrumentalist in high school, he played bass, guitar, keyboards, wind instruments, you name it. |
|
A prize is on offer to whoever comes up with the winning name for Mrs Mason's new shop. |
|
You had quite a bit of brand name talent involved for an independent, low-budget movie. |
|
The other is the name majolica, applied to lustred ware at first, and afterwards to all Italian faience. |
|
His name suggests he was born in Venice, but he was active mainly in Florence. |
|
He couldn't make out the name on the pump because of dust, but luckily a drop of water fell on it, and he could make out the name. |
|
Everywhere you turn in Glasgow it seems another new development with an evocative name is springing up. |
|
He has the name and voice of a raddled troubadour chasing his dissolution around the American heartland. |
|
As the name implies, houses in these areas were usually low-rises and were rather congested, packed closely side by side. |
|
He heard his name being called and bowed lowly for everyone to see, but he kept his eyes on her. |
|
Getting its name on the front of a record was the way symphony orchestras acquired reputation over the past century. |
|
Some, dare I suggest, will reappear under a different name a few years later and repeat the cycle a second or even a third time. |
|
I lucked upon a seat, settled in, nodded off and 20 minutes later heard my name being called by the admitting nurse. |
|
He and his friend Tobias Seeger needed only a few seconds to name the three girls their age who still live in town. |
|
It would have been so easy, after all, simply to leak his name if that's what they wanted. |
|
Shortly afterwards, getting into his car, he was called by name and, when he turned, was shot through the forehead by a fellow extremist who suspected he had ratted. |
|
The third target is to so complicate the process, in the name of safeguards, that the transaction cost will make the supply from a third country nonviable. |
|
There, Cornelius was presented with an honorary street sign with his name and the Soul Train logo on it. |
|
I've skated with a lot of pro skaters and come across lots of rad style, but the best style I've ever witness in my life was this guy, I think his name was Ryan. |
|
|
Then they wrote her name on the coffin in gold letters and added the family name. |
|
Just take your middle name and add the name of the street you grew up on. |
|
There is a hairdresser in the programme who goes by the name of Roisin. |
|
Later, they had that boy and they made his middle name my father's first name, which left me stranded as the inappropriately named child in the bunch. |
|
Previously, as CEO of the music label Capitol Imagine Group, he went by the name Corbin Grimes. |
|
Between the deafening whine of the jet engines and the music, the two men looked at each other and wondered what in God's name was transpiring up there. |
|
You'll be hearing the Brockovich name around the place ere long. |
|
It turns out that fibromyalgia went by a different name two centuries ago. |
|
Erythronium dens-canis is the true dog's tooth violet, the name comes from the shape of the corm, and has rose coloured flowers on 10 cm stems and purple marked leaves. |
|
With a name full of jargon jive and a cast of unknown comedians and aspiring actors, this marketed as a hip urban comedy sounds like a prescription for disaster. |
|
Her eyes searched for the byline to see the name of the reporter. |
|
His name was mentioned in the article, although he was incorrectly described therein as a medical doctor. |
|
Selecting one of the categories provides a tabular list of courses available in the Online Directory with details on the name of course, its duration and developer's name. |
|
In the name of protecting passengers, however, tourists in Las Vegas are unable to take advantage of this service. |
|
Conversely, in some cultures, when a person dies, his or her name and similar sounding words may be tabooed, so new words have to be coined or borrowed. |
|
A machine for weaving cloth, programmed by a punched card, had already been perfected by the end of the 18th century by Jacquard, whose name is now a dictionary word. |
|
Another three years went by before her name appeared on the score sheet. |
|
For those whose childhood memories stretch back a few decades, the name Walt Disney is likely to bring associations of wholesomeness, innocence and American virtue. |
|
The trees will be tagged with the concerned person's name or after the person in whose name it is bought and people can actually visit their trees. |
|
He puts to shame any legitimate causes in the domain name battle. |
|
|
Only 26 countries, most of them in Central America, Africa and the South Pacific, recognize the Republic of China, the official name used by Taipei. |
|
First, what we have of the author is not a proper name but a title. |
|
Environmentalists are in danger of missing the chance to give this gusher a name that will stick in the historical record. |
|
Colt, Remington, and Gauge have all soared, and Gunner is much more common than the traditional name Gunnar. |
|
Mubanga is a common Bemba name, but also the name of a tree. |
|
But, instead, the plucky teenager is an academic high-flier and the life and soul of his school, where his name is a byword for good natured generosity. |
|
The only words in the book spelt with an aitch are his name Haigh, and the town Huddersfield, which of course are pronounced Aigh and Uddersfleld. |
|
Each pilot's name was embroidered above their wings on the left chest. |
|
By the way, incongruity is the middle name of this insipid film with characters too many and too sketchy and actors short of work or talent, or both. |
|
In Spanish-speaking countries, a man takes on his mother's maiden name as a last name, but uses the patronym as the middle name and the official name. |
|
Their tactics of kidnap and blackmail shocked the world and I remember the cold shiver the very mention of their name sent down my spine as a child. |
|
The domain name registration business has more cowboys than Texas. |
|
His name is crispy, which makes everyone laugh whenever he introduces himself. |
|
Always check the seller's identity by asking for proof of name and address and be wary of sellers who want to meet you anywhere other than their home. |
|
I always went by my middle name, since my first name was so stupid. |
|
In the opening pages of his introduction, Ross alludes to the separate paths kente has taken in Ewe and Asante communities as he discusses the cloth's name itself. |
|
My name is Mngadi Mabankwe from plot 81 in the Princess squatter camp. |
|
If treated as a variety of the aggregate species D. intermedia, the New Zealand plant must bear the varietal name of norfolkensis, whether it occurs elsewhere or not. |
|
Their story is told in sacred writings of the biblical period, although the two books of the same name are not officially a part of either testament. |
|
Gunmen reportedly asked hostages if they could recite passages from the quran and to name the prophet Mohamed's mother. |
|
|
Such a pretty name for a ugly, destruction loving, globular mess. |
|
I believe that Qonce was a San or Khoi name for the Buffalo River. |
|
She climbed up to the stage in her Lucite heels, wearing a bright red kimono with her name sewn onto the back. |
|
From the day that Rupert's name was mentioned in the media, even before our address had become public, I was besieged by journalists from all over the world. |
|
So in a city now crammed with a plethora of big name chefs is a sentimental journey enough to entice the movers and shakers? |
|
Wild chervil is another name for the common wild plant cow parsley. |
|
The American team, on the other hand, proposed the name rutherfordium for the new element, in honor of the great British scientist Sir Ernest Rutherford. |
|
The radioactive tracer evaluated for this study, known by the brand name Zemiva, links a fatty acid to a radioisotope which is injected in the patient. |
|
Why did the Los Angeles Times avoid publishing the name of the maid who Arnold Schwarzenegger had a love child with? |
|
Each item must be tagged with the name and address of the passenger. |
|
Filling a void in the marketplace for quality products at reasonable prices, the Smith Brothers name has grown to be a very trusted name in the Western Industry. |
|
The 30-something heroine glamorized the metropolis and its coveted name brands, Arora says. |
|
How has a couturier whose name is rarely recognized remained culturally relevant? |
|
Rather than conforming their minds, hearts and wills to God's purposes, humans are adept at manipulating the name of God to serve their own agendas. |
|
Chris could hear his name echoing through the halls of the auditorium. |
|
There are always people you know by name and face because they really haven't changed all that much and they left quite an impression on you even after all these years. |
|
Our highest calling is to our God, the One God, before whom we have no other gods, whose name we do not take in vain, and whose sabbath day we keep sacred. |
|
He never went for material gains nor sold his name for cheap publicity. |
|
The case has shown how easy it is for a hard-working and respected professional to have their name and reputation besmirched by one wild accusation. |
|
Actually, we called it the crackhouse, a name we convinced our parents came from a large crack in the foundation. |
|
|
Its name notwithstanding, this species is not a rush but a type of sedge. |
|
There are panel discussions, film screenings, trade shows, softball tournaments, barbecues, after-parties, and other events without a name happening at all hours. |
|
Asked to name his favorite red carpet superstars, however, he picked Halle Berry, Victoria Beckham and Oprah Winfrey. |
|
The subspecies name idaltu comes from the Afar language of Ethiopia. |
|
Nor does it demonstrate that only writers can escape the label of adapter, since there are several noted film adapters sanctified by the name of auteur. |
|
Especially popular are the prawn and enoki mushroom, chicken char sui bun, poached Szechuan truffle edamame and poached Peking to name a few. |
|
Some clever person came up with the apt name of little John for a suitably shaped container for those who were caught short. |
|
Stevie didn't care. At least he didn't have an oddball name like Milo and he never had to get up for church on Sunday. |
|
Matthew, and the late antique History of the Rechabites, attributed to a holy man by the name of Zosimus. |
|
The 19th century physicist George Stoney introduced the idea and the name of the electron. |
|
The church's full name is the Armenian Apostolic Church of St Gregory the Illuminator. |
|
The name Reynolds is an Anglicization of the Gaelic Mac Raghnaill, itself originating from the Norse names Randal or Reginald. |
|
The Hebrew name for Exodus is shemot because the book opens by recapitulating the names of the 12 sons. |
|
My name is Mila. Mila is the name others gave me. The ones who found me. Mila is miracle. |
|
The horseshoe crab, a crab in name only, has been found in fossils 450 million years old. |
|
The Latin name Caesarea was also applied to the colony of New Jersey as Nova Caesarea. |
|
Jones had mentioned the fact of his amour, and of his being the rival of Blifil, but had cautiously concealed the name of the young lady. |
|
A few hours later my mother phoned and asked me if Budgie Smugglers was the name of a Bond Girl. |
|
Once the mitta, or mett, a quantity of two bushels, is used for salt. The name still lingers in Lancashire. |
|
The word Scotia was used by the Romans, as early as the 1st century CE, as the name of one of the tribes in what is now Scotland. |
|
|
On the other hand, should the kakistocrats in Iran stick with the name of expediency to describe their power brokers? |
|
As the name implies, work sample tests measure job skills by taking samples of behavior under realistic joblike conditions. |
|
Merle Haggard is a name out of a morality play. And that's the kind of songs he sings. |
|
Her name was Merle, and to her name she always said she owed the fact that Gilbert Vanborough ever looked at her. |
|
Use metasyntactic variables like foo and bar when you need a name but the particular name doesn't matter. |
|
The binding for the Appleton Alice was virtually identical to the 1866 Macmillan Alice, except for the publisher's name at the foot of the spine. |
|
She changed it when she was thirty-eight because, as she said, what can you do with a name like Joanne? Too nice. |
|
A meishi typically features the company name at the top in the largest print, followed by the job title and then the name of the individual. |
|
The Schuylkill river that flows into the Delaware at Philadelphia is also a Dutch name meaning hidden or skulking river. |
|
Several gunsmiths hopped aboard the bandwagon, but it was Arizonian Ward Koozer whose name became synonymous with the conversion. |
|
Her real name suggested a second runner-up for a Junior Miss pageant, or maybe a budding actress whose real name is Wanda Maxine Smith. |
|
The country name New Zealand originated with Dutch cartographers, who called the islands Nova Zeelandia, after the Dutch province of Zeeland. |
|
His family and friends called him Gabriel, but in publications he put the name Dante first in honour of Dante Alighieri. |
|
Cask ale and bottle conditioned beer are championed by the Campaign for Real Ale under the name real ale. |
|
British explorer James Cook subsequently anglicized the name to New Zealand. |
|
Breweriana refers to any article containing a brewery name or brand name, usually in connection to collecting them as a hobby. |
|
The hornpipe is a style of dance music thought to have taken its name from an English reed instrument by at least the 17th century. |
|
The name was immediately changed to Azeem to avoid any potential copyright issues. |
|
The origin of this name comes from the type of meat commonly used as filling. |
|
With the exception of the stone axe, none of these motifs are definite, and the name used to describe them is largely for convenience. |
|
|
Later bishops returned the episcopal seat to Wells while retaining the name Bath in the title, Bishop of Bath and Wells. |
|
Even the name of Nafisa Ali among the 166 Beijing junketeers raises question. |
|
Baptists rejected the name Anabaptist when they were called that by opponents in derision. |
|
The reduced condenser water flow rate fault, just as its name implies, is a component-level fault. |
|
I've always thought I was too large for a soft, musical name like Louise, too untidy. |
|
This official name becomes accepted by society and future generations without question. |
|
James's ambitions were greeted with very little enthusiasm, as one by one MPs rushed to defend the ancient name and realm of England. |
|
By 1570, senior figures in the government privately accepted that Elizabeth would never marry or name a successor. |
|
As with the band's fourth album, neither their name nor the album title was printed on the sleeve. |
|
This use of the M25 for these raves inspired the name of electronic duo Orbital. |
|
General Motors purchased a majority stake in 1925 and changed its name to the Yellow Truck and Coach Manufacturing Company. |
|
Moreover, his family name is associated with Regensburg, Europe's celebrated centre of sacred music. |
|
The use of a subdomain name is useful for load balancing incoming web traffic by creating a CNAME record that points to a cluster of web servers. |
|
I'm glad you spell your name like that. It's the best of all the ways to spell Isabel. |
|
It may also be that the name at least partly derives from the Roman name for the River Ribble and its eponymous Celtic deity, Belisama. |
|
The university has also established a chair of theoretical physics in the name of Peter Higgs. |
|
The new team used the Lotus name on licence from Group Lotus, and was unrelated to the original Team Lotus. |
|
The Lotus name returned to Formula One for the 2010 season, when a new Malaysian team called Lotus Racing was awarded an entry. |
|
Multiproduct branding strategy is when a company uses one name across all their products in a product class. |
|
In some manuscripts of Caesar's Gallic War their king is referred to as Imanuentius, although in other manuscripts no name is given. |
|
|
When the company's trade name is used, multiproduct branding is also known as corporate branding, family branding or umbrella branding. |
|
The native term for the language is Cymraeg, and for the name of the country of Wales it is Cymru. |
|
Visitors to the website are able to look up a place name and see the index entry made for the manor, town, city or village. |
|
He straps on his shooting irons for one last time to earn a big bounty on offer in a town rejoicing in the name of Big Whiskey. |
|
Gregory the Great in an epistle simplified the Latinised name Anglii to Angli, the latter form developing into the preferred form of the word. |
|
The name of the Angles may have been first recorded in Latinised form, as Anglii, in the Germania of Tacitus. |
|
Throughout the centuries until the 18th, the English Channel did not have any fixed name in English and in French. |
|
These small liturgical towels got... the name of Lavabo cloths or Lavaboes. |
|
In the UK there is a strong ethical feeling that the first ascender has the right to name that climb and great effort is taken to do so. |
|
The butterfly collection had each specimen labeled with the scientific name on a little piece of paper. |
|
The British name Caedbaed is found in the pedigree of the kings of Lindsey, which argues for the survival of British elites in this area also. |
|
Under what name did author Charles Hamilton write his Billy Bunter stories? |
|
The media's representation of this wonderful occasion is a tawdry assault on our senses in the name of commercialism and bulimic excess. |
|
Such a philosophical statement I propose to name philosophical consciencism. |
|
Freak Show, then, by its very name should be his crowning achievement. |
|
The Marksville culture takes its name from the Marksville Prehistoric Indian Site in Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana. |
|
Then Samuel took a stone, and set it between Mizpeh and Shen, and called the name of it Ebenezer, saying, Hitherto hath the LORD helped us. |
|
Planting includes a Judas tree, magnolias, camellias and acers, to name just a few. |
|
My informant seemed to look upon the swift as an uncanny bird, and called it by a name I had never heard before, devil-screecher. |
|
Heaven only knows why a man with a strong biblical name like James wants to be a president named Jimmy. |
|
|
However, the name United Nations was rarely used to describe the Allies during the war. |
|
Quite often, cooperativists do not know even the name of their cooperative or where it is located. |
|
At some point in the conversation my name came up, and I readily agreed to their proposition. |
|
I know you are but what am I? Jeannie would say out loud, whenever I mouthed a name at her. |
|
Spiced wine, sweetened with sugar or honey, perhaps the original of the modern liqueur, was employed occasionally under the name of hippocras. |
|
Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel. |
|
One of the most iconic brands in the world, MARTINI is the leading name in Italian winemaking and a purveyor of the highest quality aromatised and sparkling wines. |
|
After the sack of Dumbarton Rock by a Viking army from Dublin in 870, the name Strathclyde comes into use, perhaps reflecting a move of the centre of the kingdom to Govan. |
|
In a surprising move, Government had recommended Sachin's name along with Bollywood actress Rekha and businesswoman Anu Aga as the nominated member of the Rajya Sabha. |
|
James's ambitions were greeted with very little enthusiasm, as one by one members of parliament rushed to defend the ancient name and realm of England. |
|
The virus got its name from changing icons on desktops into cute cartoon pandas, the most famous of which holds three burning joss sticks in his paws. |
|
A ITS name is mesembryanthemum criniflorum, or Livingstone daisy. |
|
Now the name of the Israelite that was slain, even that was slain with the Midianitish woman, was Zimri, the son of Salu, a prince of a chief house among the Simeonites. |
|
Thereafter, Abramovich changed the ownership name to Chelsea FC plc, whose ultimate parent company is Fordstam Limited, which is controlled by him. |
|
After the name change in 1902, the club colours were changed to red shirts, white shorts, and black socks, which has become the standard Manchester United home kit. |
|
Butterhead varieties get their name from their interior leaves, which are often butter-colored, and have names such as Buttercrunch and Summer Bib. |
|
In Spanish America many local elites formed juntas and set up mechanisms to rule in the name of Ferdinand VII of Spain, whom they considered the legitimate Spanish monarch. |
|
That, however, was clearly a hostile description by the Federalists' foes, of whom Jefferson was one, and not a name used by the Federalists themselves. |
|
During the First World War, it was used as a naval training establishment under the name of HMS Victory VI, informally known as HMS Crystal Palace. |
|
The name was later shortened to Van Diemen's Land by the British. |
|