How To Use England In A Sentence

  • The true King of England is alive and well and living in the outback of Australia.
  • There's a spirit in England that is quite different from anyplace else.
  • One of the earliest lullabies in English was written during the time of King Edward II of England in the 14th century.
  • Monks from the various orders in Europe had flocked to England to set up religious houses.
  • More than 26,000 people made the trip to inspect the acers and aspidistras at what is fast becoming one of the best, and best-loved, horticultural events in the North of England.
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  • burse" (Lat. _bursa_, Gr. [Greek: borsa], bag of skin) is particularly used of the embroidered purse which is one of the insignia of office of the lord high chancellor of England, and of the pouch which in the Roman Church contains the "corporal" in the service of the Mass. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
  • KEEPS the England midfield ticking over like an expensive timepiece. The Sun
  • The epic cricket battle between England and Australia has sparked a deluge of wagers. The Sun
  • Beckham is a beaut, probably England's best player, but as captain?
  • The spirit of a soldier of the Truth entered into me; weary as I was, I rushed from the dusky corner where I had been hidden in the twilight, ran to the altar, and held up my hand with my hymn-book as I began to repeat an address that had often silenced the papistic mummers in England. In the Wrong Paradise
  • They tell me that his father was made what they call a baronet because he set a broken arm for one of those twenty royal dukes that England has to pay for. The Fixed Period
  • While the report recognised that Health Secretary has made some moves to decentralise the running of health care in England, experts claim the Scottish Executive is refusing to loosen its grip on the NHS.
  • In England the franchises enjoyed by burgesses, freemen and other consuetudinary constituencies in burghs, were dependent on the character of the burgage-tenure. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
  • If you believe the media, England is consumed by a deep and soul-searching debate about the state of the national sport.
  • John emigrated to England at the age of eighteen.
  • An eye-catching floral tribute to England rugby star Jonny Wilkinson helped Doncaster to shine in this year's Yorkshire in Bloom competition.
  • There were many French exiles in England after the Revolution.
  • The washout means England are certain at least to avoid a 7-0 whitewash in the series after losing the first four. The Sun
  • The henges represent the largest collection of Neolithic monuments outside southern England.
  • More than anything, and certainly more than money, he wanted to play for England.
  • And the chances of that happening on the Down Under tour have narrowed due to England's injury crisis.
  • England's wars, waged successfully by humble bowmen as well as knights and noblemen, created among all ranks a self-confidence that warmed English hearts.
  • During his stay in England he boarded with a family in Bath.
  • 'I knew a case once where an heir who expected a large sum of money was bequeathed a family Bible, which he threw into the fire, learning afterwards, to his dismay, that it contained many thousands of pounds in Bank of England notes, the object of the devisor being to induce the legatee to read the good Book or suffer through the neglect of it.' The Triumphs of Eugène Valmont
  • Many of the major characters are historical figures, notably Llewellyn and David, their mother Lady Senena and their two other brothers Owen Goch “Owen the Red” and Rhodri, and King Henry III of England. Sunrise in the West, by Edith Pargeter. Book review
  • Now England are the great escape artists. Times, Sunday Times
  • The study found that, compared with visitors from the south of England, northerners were twice as likely to have phoned in sick so that they could spend the day at Alton Towers.
  • Then the king of England entered into the country of Beauvoisis, brenning and exiling the plain country, and lodged at a fair abbey and Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series)
  • Devoid of the ceremony and liturgy associated with the Church of England, charismatic itinerants made a straightforward appeal.
  • The cembalo was the favorite instrument in Italy during the seventeenth century, and in England it had a great currency under the name of harpsichord. A Popular History of the Art of Music From the Earliest Times Until the Present
  • Hayes, now a professor of film in New England, blossomed under the master's tutelage, producing crisp, witty dialogue, and for a while the two were close.
  • England will be thrust straight on to a competitive footing. Times, Sunday Times
  • The ci-devant banker, then a widower with an only daughter, Esther, had journeyed to England.
  • Godiva was the wife of Leofric, earl of Mercia, one of the three great earls of 11th-century England.
  • Before the swearing of any of the jurors, 15 the defendant or prosecutor in England and Ireland could challenge the array of jurors compiled by the sheriff.
  • During a room clean up exercise, a notepad I used in England was found.
  • They also say that the offences he is accused of are not crimes in England. Times, Sunday Times
  • Increased exposure and professionalism have dovetailed to produce bona fide stars—people young players can identify with—not least among them England's hard-hitting batter Claire Taylor. Women's Cricket Scores With Investment, Interest
  • England have enjoyed 27 attempts on goal in their three matches compared to 47 by their opponents. Times, Sunday Times
  • Having done some cycling in England as a teenager, I have admired the amateur cyclists I've seen toiling up those climbs and can appreciate the difficulty of the last segment of stage eight.
  • In 1154, Henry II became King of England.
  • Betty is a bundle of nerves, has a well-developed "New-England Conscience," and among other deviative (not degenerative) signs is possessed of an insatiate desire to climb trees. Why Worry?
  • Vic Craven edged a ball on to his stumps to make the former England star only the fifth bowler currently playing anywhere in the world to have joined the elite club.
  • He credits the England player with paving the way for leg spinners in the national squad. Times, Sunday Times
  • All wrongs in the world can be fixed by an afternoon snooze - I went to sleep and woke up thinking that England had been knocked out of the world cup by Wales in the semi final.
  • It only applies in England and Wales, as separate laws cover Scotland.
  • Some of the country is like England, undulating, rolling, well-cultivated fields, enclosed with pailings which overlap each other and would be awkwardish obstacles in a hunting country; but one misses, like abroad, the cattle -- we saw one or two stray cows, but little else. A Lady's Life on a Farm in Manitoba
  • The wyvern was the emblem of the rulers of Wessex and the word "wyvern" is associated with the many areas of Wessex, reflected in many county and town heraldries of the South West and west of England.
  • Home advantage and better preparation make that outcome entirely plausible, as long as England seize the initiative early. Times, Sunday Times
  • In mitigation, conditions tend to be less conducive to batting in England than in many places overseas. Times, Sunday Times
  • England, and she kept Susan Talbot and her children in what she called their meet place, in which that good lady thoroughly acquiesced, having her hands much too full of household affairs to run after queens. Unknown to History: a story of the captivity of Mary of Scotland
  • But it would be both inaccurate and unfair to paint too bleak a picture of education in England.
  • The state is at least twice as big as England.
  • The Puritans left England to escape being persecuted.
  • He strove so hard to rival Holding that he strained stomach muscles in the Kingston Test against England in 1981.
  • Despite his occasional protestations of friendship, he disliked England and thought her a worthless ally.
  • Unless England improve their game they're going to lose the match.
  • We're familiar with the geography of New England.
  • England is so little loved, and contrasts the unpoliteness of Earl Foreign and Colonial Intelligence
  • I was actually born in New Zealand, but I've lived in England for so long that it feels like home now.
  • I have heard talk about it being the undercard for the James Toney fight and I know the people in England are now trying to get the fight over there as well.
  • Utilitarianism in Victorian England was often misconstructed as essentially anti-art, indeed as the doctrine of cultural philistines.
  • At the same time, parts of southern England were struck by a freak ice storm that encased the landscape in thick ice. Times, Sunday Times
  • Great stuff, and an interesting insight into the Edwardian England of his youth.
  • France play with more flair and inventiveness, whereas England are a more disciplined side.
  • ROBERTS: Well, from New England all the way down south, it's just one of those foggy, kind of drizzly days. CNN Transcript May 6, 2009
  • Their heirs would inherit the crowns of England and France in perpetuity. Malory: The Life and Times of King Arthur's Chronicler
  • William the Conqueror, ie King William I of England.
  • After a few months in dreary England, Alfred Tayler went to the Empire Exhibition and was seduced by the thought of farming in Southern Rhodesia. On Doris Lessing « Tales from the Reading Room
  • The chaconne also became popular in France and, towards the middle of the 17th century, in Germany and England.
  • The man who handed over the Ashes to England for the first time in a generation stood on the threshold of another ignominious defeat yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • President Taft negotiated with England and France general treaties providing for the arbitration of disputes which were "justiciable" in character even though they might involve questions of "vital interest and national honor. History of the United States
  • People in England often have roast beef and Yorkshire pudding for lunch on Sundays.
  • Playing football is all I want to do and playing football in England is perfect for me.
  • Their strokeplay was confident as England's bowlers began to wilt in the heat. The Sun
  • You won't find a prettier village anywhere in England.
  • To balance this he remained a staunch member of the Church of England and a firm believer in the indissoluble union between Church and State.
  • The king of England too had experienced the high spirit and unsubmitting temper of Lewis. The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part F. From Charles II. to James II.
  • The pioneering Jewish lesbian feminist Charlotte Wolff was a physician by training, but later became a chirologist, psychotherapist, and sexologist, well known in both England and Germany. Charlotte Wolff.
  • the cream of England's young men were killed in the Great War
  • The monarchy in England plays an important role in British culture.
  • Thousands of people turned out to welcome the England team home.
  • Since choreographing Underland in Sydney, Stephen has been undertaking commissions in Sweden, Denmark, France and England through to 2005.
  • So ended the memorable 14th of August: it will be, doubtless, remembered by many with far from pleasant feelings; and some who have been "gulled" in England may thank Mr. Petersen that a carrier-pigeon freighted with a cock-and-bull story of blood, fire, wreck, and murder, was not despatched on that memorable day. Stray Leaves from an Arctic Journal; or, Eighteen Months in the Polar Regions, in Search of Sir John Franklin's Expedition, in the Years 1850-51
  • I wrote a comment pointing out that Harlech is in Wales rather than England. May 22nd, 2006
  • The history of lexicography in England can be traced back to the 16th Century or even earlier.
  • England had no choice but to pick three players making their debuts. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has fought back from a serious knee injury and an uncertain future at Chelsea to find renewed confidence with England. The Sun
  • He was expecting the striker to be passed unfit by doctors before flying back to England. The Sun
  • The entire BBC Local Radio network in England will broadcast the funeral live.
  • The Church of England has always taken pride in its "comprehensiveness" - a British tolerance for theological diversity dating to Queen Elizabeth I, who combined element of Catholicism and Protestant ism to form a "bridge" between the two traditions. Pink Collars For Anglicans
  • The question to be answered by England is who is likely to enjoy the cracks more: spinners or seamers? Times, Sunday Times
  • a scarlet "whittle" over all this motley finery; with a "outwork quoyf or ciffer" (New England French for coiffure) with "long wings" at the side, and a silk or tiffany hood on her drooping head, -- Priscilla in this attire were pretty indeed. Sabbath in Puritan New England
  • In England you must drive on the opposite side of the road to the rest of Europe.
  • Back then, in the olden times, in England there were beadsmen.
  • Prior looked every inch an England prospect for his work behind the stumps and with the bat.
  • They had gimme caps with “England” on them, and the royal arms, and “France” with fleurs-de-lys, but nothing local. Shadow of the Moon
  • England see him as a centre, although he has made an impact for Bath at blindside flanker. Times, Sunday Times
  • The former England captain made his reputation as a prolific goalscorer and allround champion of attacking football. The Sun
  • Lara will be keen to cap his last international match with a win against England when the two under-performing teams clash on Saturday.
  • I'm very excited about the possibility of playing for England's first team.
  • Finally, I mentioned earlier the triumphant car hooters being used to celebrate the England win in the World Cup tournament.
  • Under-pressure England captain John Terry scored with eight minutes left Saturday to give English Premier League title chaser Chelsea a 2-1 win at Burnley. Toronto Sun
  • Now that John Terry has been debagged, England fans are desperate for someone to follow. Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph
  • At the age of 11 she was farewelled by her mother and sent to England.
  • We are most anxious in Canada to secure a greater population, but a man who has once received the "dole" argues, "why should I leave England, where the 'dole' is obtainable, and migrate to Canada, where it is not to be secured? A Canadian's View of the Empire as Seen From London
  • Beginning in sixteenth-century England, a distinct criminal culture of rogues, vagabonds, cutpurses, and prostitutes emerged and flourished.
  • The pug was the Dutch national dog, and soon it became a national sensation in England.
  • England became increasingly ragged in the field, and the game yet again was prised away. Times, Sunday Times
  • The England captain is scheduled to run for the first time next week since a keyhole operation in December. Times, Sunday Times
  • The man who handed over the Ashes to England for the first time in a generation stood on the threshold of another ignominious defeat yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • TD: Well, it's my first new studio music in nearly twenty years, and I've written most of the music in England in the wheelhouse of my solar powered lifeboat looking out over the North Sea, which is a very inspiring place to be. Mike Ragogna: TED, Solar Power, Windpower, and All Things Amerikana : A Conversation with Thomas Dolby
  • (such as prizefighter we have in England) and more competitive fights. Main Features
  • recent study published in the New England Journal of Medicine has raised a number of questions about the long term patency of endoscopically harvested saphenous veins that are collected and used for coronary artery bypass grafts. Medgadget
  • In London a spokesman for the Lord Chancellor's office said family law cases in England and Wales were generally heard in camera, although there was no presumption that they had to be.
  • England stood forth as the centre of opposition against Philip, and under the unwilling leadership of Elizabeth entered on its epic period of heroism, was stimulated to that remarkable outburst of energy and intellect and power which we call the Elizabethan age. The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 10
  • There is another focal point where the calendar works against England. Times, Sunday Times
  • Most of the time during the past decade the England cricket team has been battling for survival.
  • The colonist from England and France not only left some marks of domination in this North America land, but also stamped deep brands on Canadian constitution.
  • Now, that's acceptable for a six year old growing up in New England, but we can handle a more accurate version of history.
  • Playing for England provided yet bigger highs and lows.
  • The "incompetency" of criminal defendants to testify at their own trials was part of the common law of England and then the United States until the Nineteenth Century, during which incompetency gave way to the notion that the basis for disqualification - the defendant's FindLaw Writ - Recent Articles
  • One of the youngest and fastest teams here, Germany rained in the goals, 13 in all and four each against pretournament favorites England and Argentina. A Fun, Creative Germany
  • An England international, the Hull-born Liverpudlian, who began his career as an exciting youngster at Tottenham, then saw his Liverpool career peter out disappointingly.
  • Terrorists have been operating covertly in England for several years.
  • The influence of overseas players in England has undoubtedly played a part.
  • In their opening and closing games England's lumbering back four were hopelessly outmanoeuvred by bursts of fast, mobile, unpredictable attacks, like tankers anchored as speedboats darted around them.
  • As soon as she was back in England at the Stone House, Dame Beatrice sent a reply-paid telegram to Mrs Biancini: Spotted Hemlock
  • With the recruitment process still running, the job specification for the role was suddenly downgraded two weeks ago to remove any responsibility for the senior England team. Times, Sunday Times
  • The colourful Yorkshireman umpired the first innings of a game between an Old England XI and Lashings World XI at Scarborough Cricket Club.
  • Even the change in location from a gritty industrial city (Manchester, England) to a glossy, sunlit place like L.A. was a misstep that undermined the necessarily bleak tone.
  • England are best served sticking with one of those three seamers and allowing him to grow into the role. Times, Sunday Times
  • As a result of a series of European wars, Florida was ceded to England.
  • The only better run is by West Indies, who won ten successive Tests against England in the course of consecutive series whitewashes in 1984 and 1985-86.
  • His patch covers the whole of the North of England from Birmingham upwards, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
  • And not only the punters: TV's Angular Ex-England Fast Bowler Punditry Eminence could be seen holding court in raddled picnic pose, a tiny plastic Viking hat on his head. Sozzled - how English cricket got lost in drink | Barney Ronay
  • With the digital addition of a unicorn's horn, the heraldic beast conjoins a singularly aristocratic symbol of Christian purity and England's national enthusiasm for horses.
  • Russell Coope, The climatic significance of coleopteran assemblages from the Eemian deposits in southern England, Geologie en Mijnbouw / Netherlands Journal of Geosciences 79 (2/3): 257-267 (2000) Bürger and Cubasch: Are multiproxy climate reconstructions robust? « Climate Audit
  • It's really a great opportunity for people to get out into the woods, said David Lee, assistant director of program operations at Northeast Passage, which runs disability-related sports and recreation programs and services throughout New England. N.H. wilderness trails offer unparalleled disabled access
  • England's new regime is keen to end the view that one-day cricket is a glorified feeder system. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then before the week is out they'd ship you off to the poorhouse, or find an excuse to send you back to England. CONFESSIONS OF AN UGLY STEPSISTER
  • Stuart Clark: Having levelled the series, it's important that the MCG and SCG groundsmen do not serve up 'a road or two' and help England to get Graeme Swann into the game Aussie cricket commentators have been a breath of fresh air on air | Rob Bagchi
  • In the Netherlands, England, Wales, and parts of Scotland, tenants generally had good-sized holdings and relatively secure tenure.
  • Any hopes Wasps had of upsetting that plan were dashed by an England flyhalf almost forgotten in the blitz of publicity surrounding their own. The Sun
  • Inside Lord 100, Cris Cheek was rattling through a complex history of performance-based poetry in England in the 70s, and on the screen in front of us flashed many slides of old mimeoed programs of great, if transient events. Archive 2008-10-01
  • That means they can afford a couple bobbles and they probably will have them with non-division games against New England, Carolina and Miami.
  • Digitalis from the foxglove plants used by an old woman in Shropshire, England was analyzed and promoted for heart disease by Dr. William Withering in 1785 and was still widely used in herbal form until the 1950's.
  • Darren Staples/Reuters A man with an illuminated gumshield at the start of Diwali celebrations in Leicester, England, Sunday. India in Pictures
  • Instead it called for ‘further theological study on the episcopate, focusing on the issues that need to be addressed in preparation for the debate on women in the episcopate of the Church of England’.
  • Even by the standards of the time, Picton's behaviour shocked: he was recalled to England in 1806 to stand trial for ordering the illegal torture of a slave.
  • In his recent annual address to the clergy the Bish. lamented bitterly that the American "jingo" was provoking dear patient Christian England to put on her war-paint. The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 10
  • He retired to England, a fabulously wealthy man. Times, Sunday Times
  • The positive virtues are those of many a New England area: clear air, swimmable sea, home-grown tomatoes.
  • He felt insecure because his Catholic education was so exiguous — it amounted to one year at a Jesuit prep school in England. Daredevil
  • The authority of the early medieval Church in England was no different to that of any other landowner.
  • Populated by grotesques and caricatures it was a love/hate letter for an England fading into sepia.
  • Ascot has royalty, Goodwood offers glorious views towards England's south coast, but, for sheer style and panache, Longchamp is peerless.
  • The pope and the king of France taught Edward II to dissolve the preceptories, to the number of twenty-three, belonging to the Templars; in 1410 the Commons petitioned for the confiscation of all church property; in 1414 the alien priories in England fell under the animadversion of the government; their property was handed over to the crown and they escaped only by the payment of heavy fines, by incorporation into English orders, and by partial confiscation of their land. The Age of the Reformation
  • Strikes by journalists on local papers in the north of England have spread from one title to another.
  • He will be assessed by the England medical team but he looks doubtful. Times, Sunday Times
  • A hundred years before Bushnell gave his speech, New England gifts were embroidering frolicking lambs and winsome shepherdesses on needlework pictures and samplers.
  • He was off-colour during England's opening match against France, which his country lost in the dying seconds of the 93-minute thriller after skipper David Beckham muffed a penalty.
  • The kestrel is the commonest hawk in the southern parts of England, so that many opportunities occur to observe his habits; and there ought not to be any doubt in the matter. The Life of the Fields
  • The sub-species _sapientum_ (formerly regarded as a distinct species _M. sapientum_) is the source of the fruits generally known in England as bananas, and eaten raw, while the name plantain is given to forms of the species itself _M. paradisiaca_, which require cooking. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 2 "Baconthorpe" to "Bankruptcy"
  • That is typical of Bent, uncrushed by disappointment, enthusiastic even in adversity, and not at all ready to give up on his England dream. Darren Bent: Missing out on World Cup squad hurt like hell
  • Were the England players singing from this song sheet? Times, Sunday Times
  • Reuters England's Steven Finn reacts after a misfield Thursday during the team's third one-day international cricket match against India in Mohali. Both India, England Struggle on Foreign Soil
  • If we confine ourselves to Europe in the late medieval and early modern periods, we find that at least initial studies have been completed on England, France, Amsterdam, and parts of Germany.
  • And on television bulletins, viewers were first treated to how England rugby union had caned Canada which was about as exciting a tussle as Chelsea taking on Chertsey in football.
  • Norovirus is the most common cause of infectious gastroenteritis in England and Wales.
  • In England there were leaders like Oliver Cromwell with his New Model Army and radical groups like the Levellers.
  • They only had that kind of chapeau in England, it was never a continental style. A MEANS TO EVIL
  • Pictured, Ms. Kapoor, left, posed with her waxwork at Madame Tussauds in England, Oct. 27. India's Most Googled, 2011
  • Walton, imagining that his discomposure was the consequence of guilty fear, called upon him to remember the duties which he owed to England, the benefits which he had received from himself, and the probable consequence of taking part in a pert boy's insolent defiance of the power of the governor of the province. Waverley Novels — Volume 12
  • Nevertheless, the immense size of its larynx or thropple, which William dissected out and brought with him to England, seems to indicate vast powers of voice in this animal; but I am at a loss to conjecture why it should be provided either with this unusual capability of "blaring," or with the exceedingly strong whiskers that arm its muzzle, organs which, though nominally of little or no importance except in The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 13, No. 367, April 25, 1829
  • Finally, according to this article, it is obviously that William Morris and John Ruskin are not only the leader of the Arts and Crafts Movement in England, but also the pioneer of the modern design.
  • Only a fortnight ago, England coach Duncan Fletcher lamented that even the world's best all-rounders rarely reached the heights of their batting and bowling games at the same time.
  • Colonial New Englanders were also familiar with such floral motifs through imported calicoes and palampores (block-printed and painted cotton bedcovers) imported from India.
  • When we were Middlesex teammates, he vowed that he wanted to play for England, and he was ready to listen, learn and put in the hard work to turn his dreams into a reality.
  • After I bought the machine, I used to go around recording calypsos at different nightclubs, and eventually had the records made in England.
  • The Sporting magazine of 1800 lists all of the packs of foxhounds in England.
  • I have a friend who went to Guelph, she lives in England now with her hubby.
  • Brethren of St. Francis and their clients, which still roughen the pavement of Santa Croce at Florence, and recall the varnished polychrome decoration of those Greek monuments in connexion with the worn-out blazonry of the funeral brasses of England and Flanders. Greek Studies: a Series of Essays
  • The pressure on England today will not be provided by Andorra but their own expectant fans. Times, Sunday Times
  • From this he adopted the name Plantagenet, and the kings who descended from him and ruled England for more than three hundred years are called the Plantagenets. Famous Men of the Middle Ages
  • The river is designated as a European Special Area of Conservation for its water crowfoot communities but, like many of England's rivers and lakes, it is failing to meet the Government's environmental targets.
  • The technology came from England, where steam locomotives were first used to haul cars along tracks at the beginning of the century. America Past and Present
  • This is Heartbeat meets The Royal meets Where the Heart Is, set in the quaint 1950s Northern Englandshire of classic motorbikes ridden by be-goggled simpletons with wholesome wives dressed in floral pinnies.
  • But an individual in Shakespearean England who firmly believed that all tomatoes are Killer Tomatoes was not being unreasonable or irrational, as we would be apt to judge someone who held that belief in modern America. Am I a Relativist? Well, It Depends.
  • If the lowest ruffian may stab your good name with impunity in England, will you be so uncandid as to exclaim against Italy for the practice of common assassination? The Expedition of Humphry Clinker
  • It's snowing again in the New England, and of course the plowman is on his own timetable. Archive 2008-01-01
  • In old country-houses in England, instead of glass for windows, they used wicker, or fine strips of oak disposed checkerwise. Passages from the American Notebooks, Volume 1
  • John Terry had treatment from the England osteopath yesterday, Sunday, who was brought down to the Chelsea training ground to help the captain recover from his back stiffness.
  • Some years ago the gypsy moth and the browntail moth were introduced by accident into the New England states. Conservation Reader
  • Now besides our voyages and trades of late yeeres to the North and Northeast regions of the world, and our ancient traffique also to those parts; I haue not bene vnmindefull (so farre as the histories of England and of other Countreys would giue me direction) to place in the fore-front of this booke those forren conquests, exploits, and trauels of our English nation, which haue bene atchieued of old. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • I found many excellent blogs on lighthouses eg The Keeper's Blog, Old Salt Blog, Shed Some Light on Lighthouses Blog, New England Lighthouse Treasures, Montauk Point but few of them talked about heritage protection, de-manning, funding. Archive 2009-07-01
  • Bar staff were today taking more cash than ever with fans crowding bars for the crunch clash between England and Argentina.
  • His father was Louis VIII, of the Capet line, and his mother was the redoubtable Queen Blanche, daughter of King Alfonso of Castile and Eleanor of England. SAINT LOUIS, CONFESSOR, KING OF FRANCE
  • At first we seem to be in familiar terrain, both emotionally and geographically, since this story of a fractured marriage has been shifted from Oz to England.
  • I think the argument here is that Scotland isn't significant enough for England to hate it, whereas, of course, England is significant enough to rile the chippy Scots.

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