East Anglia

NOUN
  1. a region of eastern England that was formerly a kingdom
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How To Use East Anglia In A Sentence

  • Attainders could also do serious damage if they left a power vacuum in a particular region, as occurred in East Anglia when the third duke of Norfolk was attainted by Henry VIII in 1547.
  • In the fourteenth century the limits of agricultural expansion had been reached in East Anglia and there were now a much larger number of market towns and ports competing for trade.
  • By prominent members of the international climate science community whose "Climategate" e-mails purloined from the prestigious East Anglia University Climate Research Unit that exposed clear evidence of data manipulation, concealment of public records and exclusion of disagreeable research findings from influential publications. It's Time To Pardon Carbon
  • Their study is a really neat experiment to prove something that we have suspected for a long time," said Yazhu Ling, a vision scientists at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom.
  • But if the Tories are really serious about power they must win back seats like Cambridge, an island of Liberal Democrat yellow in a surrounding sea of East Anglian blue.
  • In a post-match press conference, the Norwich manager used a phrase so wildly outside the lexicon of professional football that when I heard it I could only conclude the Premier League pressure was beginning to tell, and that – if measures were not taken – the Scot would soon be rampaging butt-naked across East Anglia until tree'd by pursuing bloodhounds and brought down by a police marksman with a tranquilliser dart. Paul Lambert needs lessons in the lexicon of the football club | Harry Pearson
  • The calcareous clays, such as East Anglian boulder clay, are alkaline and therefore will not suit azaleas or rhododendrons.
  • Bearded tit numbers recorded in East Anglia during the 1991 breeding season were remarkably low.
  • What kingly magnificence could mean is brought to life by the great barrow-burial at Sutton Hoo on the East Anglian coast.
  • It is located far from Oxbridge, amidst James's own native grounds: the wilds of the bleak East Anglian seacoast.
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