His desire to realize Henry VIII's plan to subdue French influence in Scotland and achieve the union of the Crowns became an obsession. |
|
Crowns commonly have some length of column still attached, and holdfasts, less commonly recognized than crowns, also have some length of column attached. |
|
This appeal turns upon the trial Judge's decision to admit that document in evidence as part of the Crowns case at the very commencement of the trial. |
|
The Scottish version of the First Union Flag saw limited use in Scotland from 1606 to 1707, following the Union of the Crowns. |
|
In 1603, with the Union of the Crowns, King James of Scotland also became king of England and Ireland. |
|
The Union of the Crowns of England and Scotland under James was symbolised heraldically by combining their arms, supporters and badges. |
|
The Union of the Crowns had begun a process that would lead to the eventual unification of the two kingdoms. |
|
The forging of a dynastic link between the Crowns of Aragon and Castile marked the beginning of Barcelona's decline. |
|
The first golden period was over and the players that made up the teams that won four Triple Crowns had already disbanded before the Great War. |
|
They repeated the feat in 1978 and, in the process, became the first team to win three consecutive Triple Crowns. |
|
Although described as a Union of Crowns, prior to the Acts of Union of 1707, the crowns of the two separate kingdoms had rested on the same head. |
|
Although described as a Union of Crowns, until 1707 there were in fact two separate Crowns resting on the same head. |
|
He also married Henry's daughter, Margaret Tudor, setting the stage for the Union of the Crowns. |
|
The Union of the Crowns in 1603 expanded the personal union to include Scotland. |
|
In 1503, he married Henry VII's daughter, Margaret Tudor, thus laying the foundation for the 17th century Union of the Crowns. |
|
An unofficial variant used in the Kingdom of Scotland during the 17th century, following the Union of the Crowns. |
|
In a Civil War skirmish Sydney Godolphin, the poet and Royalist MP for Helston, was shot and killed in the porch of the Three Crowns. |
|
Various other designs for a common flag were drawn up following the union of the two Crowns in 1603, but were rarely, if ever, used. |
|
Before this, a personal union had existed between these two countries since the 1603 Union of the Crowns under James VI of Scotland and I of England. |
|
After the Union of the Crowns in 1603 the Scots speaking gentry had increasing contact with English speakers and began to remodel their speech on that of their English peers. |
|
|
The Privy Council of Scotland continued in existence along with the Privy Council of England for more than a hundred years after the Union of the Crowns. |
|
Since the Union of the Crowns in 1603, a separate version of the Royal Arms has been used in Scotland, giving the Scottish elements pride of place. |
|
After the Union of the Crowns of Scotland and England in 1603, King James VI, a Scot, promoted joint expeditions overseas, and became the founder of English America. |
|
In the years after the Union of the Crowns in 1603, Galloway underwent radical change, during the War of the Three Kingdoms and Covenanter rebellion. |
|
In the absence of the King after the Union of the Crowns in 1603, parliament was presided over by the Lord Chancellor or the Lord High Commissioner. |
|
After the Union of the Crowns, the supporters of the arms of the British monarch have remained as the Lion and the Unicorn, representing England and Scotland respectively. |
|
Following the death of Elizabeth I in 1603 without issue, her cousin, James VI, King of Scots, succeeded to the English throne as James I in the Union of the Crowns. |
|
The act also had the effect of establishing the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland on the first day of 1801 by uniting the Crowns of Ireland and of Great Britain. |
|
In 1603 he inherited the thrones of England and Ireland, creating a Union of the Crowns that left the three states with their separate identities and institutions. |
|
Because the frequent fires burned ground litter and brush, the fires seldom climbed into the crowns to kill mature trees. |
|
As the disease kills the lower branches of larger trees, their crowns become very thin and umbrella shaped. |
|
They also pruned tree crowns, removed dead limbs, conditioned the soil, and mulched tree bases. |
|
The crowns of the cheek teeth are relatively simple, with transverse basins separated by enamel ridges. |
|
In fact, at birth the crowns of the milk teeth are almost complete and the chewing surfaces of the permanent molars have begun to form. |
|
The best way to start an asparagus patch is by planting the asparagus crowns or roots. |
|
The six Roman heroes stand high up in the side arches, above the entablature that crowns the actual windows in the wall. |
|
Bodhisattvas are sometimes adorned with jewelry and crowns while Buddhas generally are not. |
|
For four years there were no title fights for the welterweight, middleweight, light heavyweight or heavyweight crowns. |
|
Split the crowns at the base of stems with a sharp knife or a razor blade to detect rot. |
|
Her room is overflowing with tiaras, troll dolls, magical cards, toy castles, posters, crowns, swords, and all manner of fantasy knick-knacks. |
|
|
Amazing wood decorations depicting cherubs, crowns and wreaths of flowers surround marble fireplaces. |
|
By answering questions on the backside of crowns and labels through emails, landlines and SMS messages one accumulates points. |
|
But it's clear that if it is to survive, dentists want the time to do more than 10-minute amalgams and 30-minute crowns. |
|
The treatment plan provides the extraction of the ankylotic deciduous molars and their replacement with implant-borne single crowns. |
|
Now I find myself completely unmoved by badges of hierarchy, of mitres and crooks and crowns. |
|
To grow good crowns, vigorous seed should be planted in soil that has never grown asparagus. |
|
However, the clusters involved neighboring tree crowns that were progressively shorter in height in directions opposite the solar azimuth. |
|
She claimed a tour-high seven women's doubles titles, as well as the Australian Open and Wimbledon mixed doubles crowns. |
|
The ultra-loyal City defender crowns a decade at Valley Parade tomorrow with his testimonial match against Bolton. |
|
It has corbie-stepped gables with two round bartizans and a caphouse which crowns the stair. |
|
Ornaments carved in bas-relief presented flowing full figures, cherubs, flowers, and crowns. |
|
Aaron and Ruth both won batting and RBI titles to go with their multiple home run crowns but never put together all three legs in one year. |
|
Finally, at a time designated by the Pope, the eldest cardinal deacon crowns the new Pope with the triple tiara of the papacy. |
|
In fact there are river banks and bluffs, coulees and crowns, sandhills and blue hills and unnamed prominences, ravines. |
|
Would he have won Champions League crowns, major domestic titles, perhaps even a Footballer of the Year award? |
|
But fires can kill when flames reach the crowns of smaller trees and leap from there to the limbs of the sequoias, high above the ground. |
|
The woods there are thick, mostly high maples and beeches whose leafy crowns create a canopy overhead. |
|
The crescent of land that crowns Michigan's lower peninsula offers perfect topography, soil, views and weather. |
|
Three crowns and an old nag she'd borrowed from a student would not buy her that automobile. |
|
We get to wear these pretty silk baby blue gowns with white translucent shawls and orchid crowns on our heads. |
|
|
They set the asparagus roots 6 to 8 inches deep in the trench and covered the crowns with 2 inches of compost. |
|
Can you name three individuals born on the wrong side of the blanket who eventually came to wear crowns? |
|
Its weight massed in the crowns makes trees prone to toppling in a strong blow. |
|
Cover the plastic with a thin layer of fir bark or similar mulch, taking care not to mound it around plant crowns. |
|
Elegant ladies sported blow-up crowns, their husbands carried discarded necklaces and flags indulgently. |
|
Over the past three years, he'd managed to skim a little over eight thousand crowns worth of currency. |
|
In contrast to the exhumation chronicles, which claimed wooden skullcaps covered the sawn-off crowns, their skulls are intact. |
|
Argent on a cross gules enfiled in pale by two mural crowns or a rose of the first stalked and leaved proper. |
|
The white and blue waves refer to the River Mersey and the six mural crowns, being civic emblems, to the six constituent districts. |
|
To get a revolver to shoot heart-shaped groups involves a complex relationship of bullets to throats to barrel bores and crowns. |
|
The double and triple bowknots, the wreath, and the crowns may be used with both the single and double ribbons. |
|
The ancient Greeks awarded crowns, the Romans torques and decorative discs. |
|
However, there were also crowns, farthings, guineas and sovereigns, all in varying amounts and none really compatible with any of the others. |
|
They are exclusively browsers, using their long necks to reach into the crowns of trees to feed. |
|
And we ended up doing crowns and veneers on her instead of doing the ortho, because I couldn't do the ortho. |
|
Different types of restoration including fillings, crowns, veneers, inlays, onlays and root fillings. |
|
The victors of the Olympic Games in ancient Greece were awarded crowns made of olive branches. |
|
No songbirds to tangle in the hedges, in shrubs, up above your head in the crowns of cypress and in the branches of chestnut trees, plane trees. |
|
By the middle of the century the crowns had been lowered, the skull piece extended to cover the sides and back of the head, and the camail added. |
|
It is a literary event that crowns his trilogy of epic books about America culminating in The Human Stain. |
|
|
That means there's no need to mulch the plants to protect the strawberry crowns from winter cold. |
|
We don't go for gaudy over-decorated Mary-figures in crowns, or bleeding hearts, or stuff like that. |
|
But even as the winners seemed to compete for the crowns of dumb and dumber, the barrage of overhype left everyone numb and number. |
|
The ambassador for Poland is returning from Rome having made suit to the Pope for 20,000 crowns. |
|
There were farthings, pennies, oxfords, crowns, florins, shillings, guineas, and pounds, among other divisions. |
|
The pope blessed the two crowns, and the ceremony reached its climax when Napoleon crowned himself and his wife Josephine. |
|
These turbans or crowns are a form of anciency representing the royalty of I and I Rastafari people from ancient times until this time. |
|
They are also beautiful examples of Italian styling, with curvaceous white pearlescent outer legs and shapely polished crowns. |
|
Each year, for example, imitative Miskitu crowns, scepters, and swords appear as part of a celebratory re-enactment called the kingpulanka. |
|
Hundreds of ancient artifacts were stolen, including manuscripts, gold crowns, crosses and chaises. |
|
Several months earlier Sir Henry Mildmay had been summoned to give an account of the whereabouts of the crowns, robes, sceptres and jewels. |
|
Eighteen candles, plus one to grow on, on a pink-and-white princess cake, decorated lavishly with fake jewels and mini crowns. |
|
Other scenes showed the genies of France and the king lifting a royal mantle from the ground and a winged victory with crowns and a trumpet. |
|
An emaciated, rake of a lackey with crowns on his lapels kept ushering supplicants and victims into the Secretary's panelled office. |
|
In the third bowl are flowers, reminiscent of the crowns of flowers offered to women and the garlands offered to men. |
|
The rematch, should it proceed, will be a defence of his two junior middleweight crowns. |
|
Now many guys are flashing their crowns, whether they're losing hair or not. |
|
Early feeding occurs at the crowns and below the soil surface on the roots and stems of small plants. |
|
The crowns send up shoots from a foot or so deep in the ground when the temperature or the soil or some cosmic signal tells it to. |
|
The larvae of root weevils feed on strawberry roots and crowns, which can weaken, stunt, or kill plants. |
|
|
Be sure to cover plants with a thick layer of organic mulch to stop any further heaving and to prevent additional drying to the crowns and roots. |
|
They also may infect buds or new shoots being formed at the crowns of healthy plants in the summer. |
|
The bacteria induce galls or tumors on the roots, crowns, or canes of infected plants. |
|
The largest trees were retained as to remove these with their large spreading crowns would damage surrounding trees during felling. |
|
The previous factory used to boast a road lined with camphor trees, whose crowns shaded the whole road. |
|
During dryer intervals lightning strikes started fires even on the low-lying areas where they may have spread through the crowns of the trees. |
|
Built in the crowns of trees as high as 70 feet, the nests have a nasty tendency to topple. |
|
When the fires were intense enough to burn the crowns of the trees, these animals had nowhere to go. |
|
This species is distinguished by the cutting-edges on its flattened tooth crowns, which are otherwise unknown among ichthyosaurs. |
|
He required a long course of treatment to repair his teeth, including gum surgery, implants, bridges and crowns. |
|
Some treatments, particularly cosmetic treatments like porcelain crowns, could be had for one third of the cost in the North. |
|
Recently, I had some dental work done that called for putting temporary crowns on my two front teeth. |
|
The crowns, bridges or dentures are generally easily replaced, providing the implant underneath is not damaged. |
|
Your dentist can also give you advice about replacing your metal fillings and crowns with tooth-coloured ones. |
|
Non-routine dental expenses, including crowns, bridgework, periodontal and orthodontic treatment, do qualify for tax relief. |
|
I went to other dentists who flat out refused to fix my teeth with crowns because of my insurance. |
|
Cardan accepted over two thousand gold crowns but turned down the offer of a permanent place at the Scottish court. |
|
The meeting was called to raise 2 million gold crowns to pay the ransom for the king's two sons held captive in Spain. |
|
He accepted 75,000 gold crowns, an annual pension of 50,000 gold crowns and a promise of marriage for his daughter to the Dauphin. |
|
Within a week I was on the border of the Old Kingdom, with nothing to my name but my clothes, a horse, and a few gold crowns. |
|
|
Forty crowns I can afford, but are you sure you would not have asked more if it was another who showed interest? |
|
Ignoring or not noticing the foul play the referee crowns the miscreant as the wrestling champion. |
|
Some 22 culchies from 15 counties travelled to Lisselton to compete for one of the nation's most sought-after crowns. |
|
But some early baseball caps sat up, blocky, like what tops the crowns of French gendarmes. |
|
A high cap surrounded by three crowns and bearing a globe surmounted by a cross. |
|
They throw their crowns before this throne and prostrate themselves as servants of this Lord, singing. |
|
They rest at a holy place, a hill with crowns of trees and golden star-shaped flowers. |
|
Over two decades with the St. Louis Cardinals, he won three MVP awards and seven NL batting crowns. |
|
The tribes also passed honorary decrees, awarded honorific crowns, and sponsored dinners for all members at the time of the Dionysiac and Panathenaic festivals. |
|
Bleaching won't work on false teeth, crowns, veneers or fillings. |
|
Then from the inner room came the servants again, carrying two crowns like great hieratic tiaras, barbaric diadems, composed of pearls of the finest orient. |
|
The elaborately carved rows or monumental crowns admired in the wooden sculptures of the Mende or Yoruba people in West Africa mirror the hairstyles worn today. |
|
Headdresses were extravagantly plumed helmets or crowns fusing baroque and classical styles, and the masquers were shod in tightly fitting short boots, or buskins. |
|
On one side, dense underbrush built up after years of fire prevention allows a blaze to leap to the crowns of trees, spraying burning fuels across a fire line. |
|
Barblow smiled revealing a gold tooth and many silver crowns. |
|
The girls of Warcop carry their crowns of flowers, which they traditionally gather the previous day, and the boys hold rushes made in the shape of a cross. |
|
A carpet of glory-of-the-snow, anemones, and trout lilies looks lovely blanketing the ground among the awakening crowns of clumping ferns like Dryopteris and Polystichum. |
|
There were nice fatty chuck roasts, rolled flanks and skirts, four kinds of fresh looking ground beef in those pretty crowns that I knew I'd never learn to make. |
|
The prize, 75,000 Swedish crowns, is awarded annually in Stockholm. |
|
Eight crowns with alternating large and small fleurons are described. |
|
|
Charge three crowns a pound for forcemeat that costs five crowns to make. |
|
The windows are surmounted by rusticated wooden jack arches with superimposed keystones, and a heavy modillion cornice crowns the bold Georgian proportions of the facade. |
|
Beneath the table his feet are doing their own private dance, while the wiry hair that crowns his angular, mercurial features is a buzz of static feedback. |
|
Tooth-colored resins are also more attractive. But in cases of fracture, extensive decay, or malformation of baby teeth, dentists often opt for stainless steel crowns. |
|
Flames, which boiled in the crowns of Douglas fir and ponderosa pines, catapulted forward on heavy winds partly of the fire's own making-a classic crown fire. |
|
No sky alight with revelation crowns this picture, only a small triangle congested greeny-yellow by the monsoon, crammed against the top of the frame by the massif. |
|
Artificial tooth supports surgically set in the jaw are used in combination with bridges, dentures and crowns to replace any number of missing teeth. |
|
He also parted company with the Farnese Flora by exchanging her wreath and fillet for oak crowns, a reminder that his figure stood against the thick woods of Versailles. |
|
A wide tree-lined mall leads to the flagstaff, which crowns a small hill. |
|
Kingston's first-ever coordinated Christmas street lighting was on December 3, 1979 in Market Place and Fife Road consisting of 16 shimmering gold crowns. |
|
The many foresters in the group moved slowly as well, squinting up at the crowns of the trees, feeling bark and leaves and identifying the many species we walked among. |
|
While you're waiting go outside and cut the culprits down to their crowns. |
|
He is currently making inroads in African-American churches, and is spearheading a drive to take crosses out of the churches and have them replaced with crowns. |
|
Their haul included golden crowns, precious chalices, tabots, altar slabs, beautiful processional crosses, dozens of fine manuscripts and his hair. |
|
Wooden statues and princely crowns were taken off from the pediment, while the high tent-like top was transformed into an ordinary roof with two slopes. |
|
He had no tattoos or other distinguishing body marks but he had two crowns on teeth to the front of his right upper jaw, possibly suggesting an accident or sporting injury. |
|
Affected stands either fail to initiate spring growth or green up unevenly in March and then plants decline and eventually die due to infected crowns and roots. |
|
The Italian states were deeply affected by the European wars that were fought to settle the succession of the crowns of Spain, Poland, and Austria. |
|
On the eve of the event, inspired by childhood visits to the famous Levens Hall in Cumbria, Boston began cutting them into pairs of orbs and crosses and crowns. |
|
He made regular trips to remote parts of the Amazon rainforest, where seasonal floods produce a bizarre drowned world in which fish feed in the submerged crowns of trees. |
|
|
City officials plan to enhance the pine canopy by thinning out thickly planted forests to give older longleaf pines more room to spread their crowns. |
|
Finally, top up decorative mulches, as they will help to suppress unseasonal weed growth and provide insulation for tender bulbs and plant crowns against hard frosts. |
|
Pods strung on armatures and made into shapes that evoke crowns, starbursts and galaxies add human or celestial content and help the natural materials transcend their roots. |
|
It is the handkerchief tree par excellence, the large rounded crowns being covered with evenly spaced handkerchieves of white at frequent intervals. |
|
The rising edentulous population has become one of the major market drivers for dental implants, crowns and bridges. |
|
For example wax pontics or pre modelled occlusal surfaces are available to facilitate a wax modelling for metal casting of crowns and bridges. |
|
The joining of the two crowns deprived Portugal of a separate foreign policy, with King Phillip II's enemies becoming Portugal's enemies as well. |
|
Henry now hoped to unite the crowns of England and Scotland by marrying his son Edward to James' successor, Mary. |
|
Her dowry, upon the agreement between the two kingdoms, was 600,000 crowns. |
|
His accession to the Danish throne in 1018 brought the crowns of England and Denmark together. |
|
The crowns also serve as a reminder of the crowns that await them in heaven, if they live their lives in faithfulness to God and to each other. |
|
The monarch of England held the crowns of England and Ireland in a personal union. |
|
The supporters change sides and both appear wearing the crowns of their respective Kingdom. |
|
Some European king and queen's crowns were made of gold, and gold was used for the bridal crown since antiquity. |
|
Gold alloys are used in restorative dentistry, especially in tooth restorations, such as crowns and permanent bridges. |
|
The use of gold crowns in more prominent teeth such as incisors is favored in some cultures and discouraged in others. |
|
The male Spanish sparrow and Italian sparrow are distinguished by their chestnut crowns. |
|
Posterior molars erupt at the back of the row and slowly move forward to replace these like enamel crowns on a conveyor belt. |
|
After Isabella's victory in the civil war and Ferdinand's ascension to the Aragonese throne the two crowns were united under the same monarchs. |
|
The Treasure of Guarrazar of votive crowns and crosses is the most spectacular. |
|
|
Early in his reign, James attempted to reunite the Aragonese and Navarrese crowns through a treaty with the childless Sancho VII of Navarre. |
|
Subsequent negotiations between the crowns of Portugal and Spain proceeded in Columbus's absence. |
|
These crossed weddings strengthened the ties between the two crowns, facilitating an agreement regarding the Moluccas. |
|
In the raft with him went four principal subject chiefs, decked in plumes, crowns, bracelets, pendants and ear rings all of gold. |
|
In October 1555, Emperor Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire began the gradual abdication of his several crowns. |
|
As an example, the Konvoi wore scarlet cherkesskas, white beshmets, and red crowns on their fleece hats. |
|
Prior to 1907, the monarch and his sons present would also wear ceremonial robes and their crowns. |
|
Carrock Fell is also the site of an Iron Age hill fort which crowns the summit. |
|
Among those meeting there were the Earls of Danby and Devonshire, commemorated by the ducal crowns around the supporters' necks. |
|
The scolex exhibits a retractable rostellum with crowns of recurved thorn-like hooks and four cup-like suckers. |
|
However, after the union of the crowns of Scotland and England under King James VI and I, peace was largely established. |
|
It was all cheap and incredibly tawdry, from the festoons of paper roses on the walls to the flash of paste jewels in make-believe crowns. |
|
In the reign of Edward IV, a commission appointed to enquire what were the arms of Ireland found them to be three crowns in pale. |
|
I will physic your rankness, and yet give no thousand crowns neither. Holla, Dennis! |
|
Both taxa have scales whose crowns consist of numerous spiniform odontodes. |
|
When heavy ice and wet snow coat tree limbs, the layers can be thick enough to break branches, twist limbs and crack tree crowns. |
|
Sunlit tree crowns were classified using a Random Forest approach for monotemporal, two-date and three-date combinations. |
|
The dry, tussocky crowns of pampas are another favoured site for hibernating hedgehogs. |
|
When the crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland were united in 1603, they were integrated into the unified royal coat of arms. |
|
Because both Canada and Australia are federations, there are also crowns in right of each Canadian province and each Australian state. |
|
|
The eight crowns, titles, medals, belts and other distinctions make Manny an octuple champion. |
|
A shield of three golden crowns, placed two above one, on a blue background has been used as a symbol of East Anglia for centuries. |
|
The Penderels and Colonel Careless employed coats of arms depicting an oak tree and three royal crowns, differentiated by colour. |
|
England and Scotland now shared the same monarch under what was known as a union of the crowns. |
|
Constantius marries Coel's daughter, Helena, and crowns himself as Coel's successor. |
|
A dowry of 200,000 crowns had been agreed, and half was paid shortly after the marriage. |
|
At the same time, the crowns of the teeth became longer, and the skulls become higher from top to bottom and shorter from the back to the front over time to accommodate this. |
|
At the Cortes of Tomar in 1581, Philip was crowned Philip I of Portugal, uniting the two crowns and overseas empires under Spanish Habsburg rule in a dynastic Iberian Union. |
|
Meanwhile The Co-operative Group has confirmed that it will switch its fresh own-brand turkey and turkey crowns to its Elmwood higher-welfare standard from Easter. |
|
The Acts of Union took effect in 1707, uniting the separate Parliaments and crowns of England and Scotland and forming the single Kingdom of Great Britain. |
|
Thus, after the celebration of Ferdinand II's obsequies on 14 March 1516, Charles was proclaimed king of the crowns of Castile and Aragon jointly with his mother. |
|
At the time, the pope was then deep in the midst of arbitrating between the claims of the crowns of Portugal and Spain over Columbus's discoveries. |
|
I know already, for your forwardness, you have deserved rewards and crowns, and, we do assure you, on the word of a prince, they shall be duly paid you. |
|
From the union of the crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland in 1603, they have appeared quartered on the royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom. |
|
Additionally, laurel wreaths were important in several state ceremonies, and crowns of laurel were rewarded to champions of athletic, racing, and dramatic contests. |
|
Mostly circular, oval or rectangular in shape, they are decorated on top with embossed birds, animals, crowns, fruits and flowers and their sides are fluted or gadrooned. |
|
It superimposes the three crowns in a blue shield on a St George's cross. |
|
In return for increased lands in Aquitaine, Edward renounced Normandy, Touraine, Anjou and Maine and consented to reducing King John's ransom by a million crowns. |
|
The joining of the two crowns deprived Portugal of an independent foreign policy and led to its involvement in the Eighty Years' War between Spain and the Netherlands. |
|
The episode also had major political consequences, persuading the governments of both England and Scotland of the merits of a union of countries, rather than just crowns. |
|
|
Since 1640, Portugal had been fighting a war against Spain to restore its independence after a dynastic union of sixty years between the crowns of Spain and Portugal. |
|
Decimal crowns are generally not found in circulation as their market value is likely to be higher than their face value, but they remain legal tender. |
|
I know each is caused by the fire accelerating rapidly up the valley, consuming everything in its path and travelling swiftly up to the crowns of the tall gums and eucalypts. |
|
The Acts came into effect on 1 May 1707, uniting the separate Parliaments and crowns of England and Scotland and forming a single Kingdom of Great Britain. |
|
Protect the crowns of dormant plants like agapanthus and alstroemerias with a loose covering of straw or dried leaves, held in place with wire netting and pegs. |
|
Protect the crowns of dormant plants such as agapanthus and alstroemerias with a loose covering of straw, held in place with wire netting and pegs. |
|
Sophia, who was anxious not to be reckoned a usurpress and who wished to keep up appearances, held two thrones and two crowns on behalf of Ivan and Peter. |
|
In clinical practice, it shall be develop and implement suitably effective coating strategies on definitive prosthetic transgingival abutments or on zirconia crowns. |
|
A lighthouse crowns a lofty cliff on the north-east extremity, and though of doubtful value as a sealight forms a good mark for entering Clew Bay. |
|
In their own lives they would not be reachers after crowns, and knew it. |
|
Following the personal union of the crowns Carlisle Castle should have become obsolete as a frontier fortress, but the two kingdoms continued as separate states. |
|
The lagoon was large and deep, so that a ship with high sides could sail on it, all loaded with an infinity of men and women dressed in fine plumes, golden plaques and crowns. |
|
Then the huge reddish trunks of massarandubas began to slide past us, their lofty crowns matting together so thickly that they seemed to make a solid roof. |
|