The decorous sentimental verses written by patroness and client during such visits hint at a platonic salon flirtation. |
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The Empress lives on as a spiritual guide and patroness of our present day Shih Tzu. |
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She is the patroness of unmarried girls, who on marriage pass out of her domain into the tutelage of other, less farouche, goddesses. |
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One was below a picture of Saint Maria Goretti, the patroness of young women and wayward teens. |
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It was written at the court of Marie de Champaigne, influential patroness of the arts. |
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She ends up as a patroness of the arts because she enjoys posing for a nude statue. |
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His wife, meanwhile, became dresser to their old patroness, the Queen-Dowager, Henrietta-Maria. |
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She turned away to welcome the next person, a longtime member of Early Music Society, a widow and patroness. |
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Our sweet patroness died for our right to plant those mines. |
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By the way, Allison, did you get any patroness to sponsor dear Cecilia? |
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Perhaps the most important of the anthropomorphic Shinto deities is the sun goddess Amaterasu, the patroness and ancestor of the Japanese emperors. |
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Lady Mary was a highly respected patroness of the arts all her life. |
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Until now she has been all mystique: bride in a family of martyrs, patroness of the disadvantaged, goddess of Indian secularism. |
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By the 7th century the rule had been applied to women, as nuns, whose patroness was deemed Scholastica, sister of St. Benedict. |
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Today, 12 December, is the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, patroness of the Americas. |
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Recently, the bishops of Oceania proclaimed her as patroness of the Pacific region under her title of Queen of Peace. |
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The life of our holy patroness and her Franciscan spirit provides an inspiring example for us to imitate. |
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The date chosen by the Council is the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, whom Pope John Paul II has designated as the patroness of the Americas. |
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A side chapel is dedicated to the patroness of Ypres, Our Lady of Thuyne, a 'thuyne' being a sort of palisade fort. |
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Nationalism is a gradual and fitful process, not a phenomenon that springs fully armed from Zeus's brow and remains an unstinting armed patroness of the national polity. |
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Miri watched her patroness in the uppermost quadrant of the mirror. |
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Cecilia became patroness of music through a misunderstanding. |
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As virgin patroness of the canons at Chich, Osith here joins a pantheon of elite women, both in terms of her companion texts and the manuscript's users. |
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She can be seen as a protector of pregnant women who give birth in poverty, a patroness of those who migrate to foreign lands in order to survive, and as one who keeps vigil when her child is arrested, tortured and killed. |
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She took a lively interest in affairs of state, and was a patroness of theatre, poetry and music. |
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In view of the special relationship maintained between Canada and The Netherlands since the war, Her Royal Highness Princess Margriet of The Netherlands will be the patroness of the Canadian tour of Het Nationale Ballet. |
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Although it did not have any important monuments or public buildings, it was rich in popular devotional sanctuaries such as the temple dedicated to Juno, patroness of women in labour. |
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She was particularly known as the patroness of spinning and weaving. |
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