How To Use Pennines In A Sentence
-
The two got together, and when Jim returned to the Bolton area, Maureen moved across the Pennines to join him.
-
A city of north - central Italy at the foot of the Apennines north - northeast of Florence.
-
All free peoples have a right to self-determination and we who live near to or in the Pennines demand the same rights as the Scots and the Welsh, (but not the English, who aren't entitled to self determination because they are a multi-cultural mongrel hot potch undeserving of privileged minprity status).
On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
-
The skyline is disfigured by pylons carrying electricity over the Pennines.
Times, Sunday Times
-
The lower unit, the Gneiss Group, is unaffected by Alpine deformation and is regarded as the autochthonous basement of the northern Apennines.
-
People may have first been drawn to Thornborough by the River Ure, a route between the Pennines to the west and Yorkshire's low-lying vales to the east.
-
His thick Israeli accent sounded loud in the Swiss Cottage air - pungent and appealing and strange, like Balti spices in the Pennines.
-
The young American bemoaned the wet and cold of the Pennines, disconcerted by their bleakness that inspired the Brontes more than a century before.
-
Eight pubs across the Pennines are to ban stag and hen parties in an attempt to curb rowdy behaviour.
Times, Sunday Times
-
Apennines, where two buildings separated by some miles of distance are commonly intervisible over the crest of a neighbouring peak, it has happened that a change of level of some one of the points has made it impossible to see the one edifice from the other.
Outlines of the Earth's History A Popular Study in Physiography
-
The present period is most undoubtedly the period of the cetaceans; and the future geologist who goes hunting for dry bones among the ooze of the Atlantic, now known to us only by the scanty dredgings of our 'Alerts' and 'Challengers,' but then upheaved into snow-clad Alps or vine-covered Apennines, will doubtless stand aghast at the huge skeletons of our whales and our razorbacks, and will mutter to himself in awe-struck astonishment, in the exact words of my friend at South Kensington, 'Things used all to be so very big in those days, usedn't they?'
Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
-
Dressed in Royalist uniforms and on horseback, they will follow the route taken by Prince Rupert in 1644 when he led a relief force of infantry and cavalry across the Pennines.
-
The Pennines are a range of mountains running up the middle of the northern half of England.
-
Some opened wholefood co-ops in hippy havens, before tragically becoming Calderdale Labour Council Leaders and finally deputy chairman of quango the Countryside Agency, a role for which she would appear to have few qualifications beyond knowing one end of a mung bean from the other, and doubtless a knowledge of the best magic mushroom fields in the Pennines.
Pointy Heads
-
The North Pennines was once the lead mining centre of the world and the ruined traces of abandoned lead mines are now acknowledged as an intrinsic part of the landscape and its heritage.
-
The farm road is now followed for about a mile and climbs uphill past farm buildings to reveal wide views of the West Pennines.
-
In the Alps and Apennines mountain ski resort to enjoy the pleasure of the driving range.
-
Our trip over the Pennines went very well yesterday, good job we did it yesterday as today the M62 is blocked due to an accident.
-
A chain of mountains, the Apennines, juts down the center of the peninsula.
-
The telltale marks recall a lost world from 175 million years ago when neither cliffs nor sea were there and the area was a near-tropical coastal plain watered by rivers from the Pennines.
-
The young American bemoaned the wet and cold of the Pennines, disconcerted by their bleakness that inspired the Brontes more than a century before.
-
He graduated in 1970, becoming a houseman at Pontefract General Infirmary in west Yorkshire, before joining his first practice in Todmorden, in the Pennines.
-
The partisans showed great courage, but some of them had to withdraw from the Parma Apennines down towards Tuscany.
-
The present period is most undoubtedly the period of the cetaceans; and the future geologist who goes hunting for dry bones among the ooze of the Atlantic, now known to us only by the scanty dredgings of our 'Alerts' and 'Challengers,' but then upheaved into snow-clad Alps or vine-covered Apennines, will doubtless stand aghast at the huge skeletons of our whales and our razorbacks, and will mutter to himself in awe-struck astonishment, in the exact words of my friend at South Kensington, 'Things used all to be so very big in those days, usedn't they?'
Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
-
Malcolm said that he was going pot - holing in the Pennines and I wished him joy.
-
The mining of nonmetallic ores - fluorspar, witherite, and barite (known locally as baryte) - in the Northern Pennines began about the time lead and iron mining were in serious decline.
-
Snow was settling on the Pennines this morning but roads were still passable with care.
-
The difficult terrain of the Pennines will be a hard nut to crack.
-
Tubes closely resembling those of pogonophoran worms are preserved in cold-seep carbonate at the Marmorito locality in the Italian Apennines.
-
A town of central Italy in the Apennines northwest of Naples.
-
Below us the patchwork of fields stretched to the bleaker Pennines.
Times, Sunday Times
-
A founder member of the Rochdale Art Society, Donald Taylor was very well known for oil and watercolour landscapes, mainly depicting the Lake District, the Pennines, the Yorkshire Dales and Whitby.
-
The skyline is disfigured by pylons carrying electricity over the Pennines.
Times, Sunday Times
-
The northern skyline is dominated by the sierra of the northern Pennines.
-
`OK, we got stuck on a nasty bit of Luna, in the Apennines.
SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
-
The battle of the backlashes has resumed in the fogbound Pennines after the briefest of truces over Christmas.
Oldham East presents voters with dilemma: who gets the biggest slap?
-
The menu still refers, quaintly, to feathered and furred game, mostly brought down from the restaurant's own game estate in the high Pennines.
-
The strategy governing the operations was essentially the same as it had been in the previous fall, when a drive had been conceived which was to bisect northern Italy and to be followed by a debouchment from the Apennines out into the Po Valley.
-
Situated only eight miles from Manchester's bustling city centre and with superb views over the Pennines, the elegant Norton Grange Hotel at Rochdale offers fine four-star accommodation within landscaped grounds.
-
Chill easterlies have established a stronger hold than expected along the entire North Sea coast and as far as the Pennines, Birmingham, Oxford and Hampshire.
More snow forecast before cold snap gives way to high winds
-
In the trapped heat of the Apennines, they cling to the refracted possibility that the scarce coolness from the snow-covered peaks will blow over and down.
-
The cheese on the classic pizza margherita must be mozzarella "from the southern Apennines".
-
The mining of nonmetallic ores - fluorspar, witherite, and barytes (commercial barite ore) - in the northern Pennines began about the time lead and iron mining were in decline.
-
The most productive coalfields in Great Britain in the 1980s were on the eastern flanks of the Pennines.
-
The attack took place as racial violence flared across the Pennines in Oldham after National Front supporters descended on the town to hold an illegal march.
-
Eight pubs across the Pennines are to ban stag and hen parties in an attempt to curb rowdy behaviour.
Times, Sunday Times
-
I recalled their Frankish forefathers, swarming down the Apennines, upon
Campaigns of a Non-Combatant, and His Romaunt Abroad During the War
-
UPSIDE The Pennines form a dramatic backdrop to the rolling parkland.
Times, Sunday Times
-
By the end of Monday, we expect to see three to five centimetres of snow, with higher accumulations towards the Pennines, the North York Moors and the Wolds.
-
UPSIDE The Pennines form a dramatic backdrop to the rolling parkland.
Times, Sunday Times