Over the centuries, the hill became in folk memory a sort of Bulgarian Camelot and is now a revered national historic site. |
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Yet, you offered to stay behind at Camelot willingly, when you were not lamed or too young. |
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Camelot, the company that runs Britain's national lottery, has had its ups and downs. |
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After all, there are many wealthy nobles who wed at Camelot, and there are many tournaments. |
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Termite mounds dot the roadside, rising in vertical shafts to tapering points, each one a tiny architectural marvel, a many-towered Camelot. |
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Harlan took the dagger and hammered it down onto the desk so loudly that it made even Camelot jump. |
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With great promptness Camelot brought the present proceedings for judicial review. |
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Camelot believes the scratchcard, launched tomorrow, will appeal to people who buy record or gift tokens as presents. |
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It's the same story in Europe, where a new game called Camelot was created with the express purpose of bad odds leading to big jackpots. |
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White later wrote that he regretted the role he played in transmitting the Camelot myth to the public. |
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But it was also this notion of how much attention our relationship had gotten, this kind of Camelot feel to it. |
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Camelot arrived at their teeny-teeny-tiny probability by multiplying these two teeny-tiny probabilities together. |
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In recent years, Camelot has been struggling to curb falling ticket sales, launching a midweek draw in February 1997 in an attempt to stop the rot. |
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I would point out to the honourable Member that the Camelot Group, which runs the UK National Lottery, is also listed as a sponsor. |
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His death in 1631 marked the end of this glittering Italian Camelot. |
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It's the first time cameras have been allowed behind the scenes of lottery operator Camelot, and this rather amateurish film reveals what happens once a win is confirmed. |
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Lotto operator Camelot is now urging all National Lottery players in the Doncaster area to check and double-check their old tickets very carefully. |
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The series Merlin show their beginning in Camelot, under the control of Uther Pendragon. |
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Fiction has nothing to match the moment that a president's widow had the presence of mind to embalm her husband in the myth of Camelot. |
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Camelot, which has ploughed thousands in lottery profits into the four in which Pinsent and Cracknell will now row, may have stumbled on a bonanza of big-screen proportions. |
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In 1960 she had another hit in a role developed especially for her, that of Queen Guinevere in Lerner and Loewe's Camelot. |
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And this peculiar Camelot is set down in a vast natural desert, forbidding, unknowable. |
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Celine also recorded The Prayer for the soundtrack of Quest For Camelot, an animated movie. |
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Camelot Housing Co-op in St. John's has joined CHF Canada, making every one of the province's 22 housing co-ops a member. |
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But the Camelot image as applied to the Kennedy presidency had some unfortunate and unforeseen consequences. |
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Mrs. Kennedy, interpreting the gist of the exchange, signaled to White that Camelot must be kept in the text. |
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At Pentecost, Arthur gathers his knights at Camelot and establishes the Round Table company. |
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Camelot said the first ever triple roll-over in the Lottery's 10-year history had resulted in a surge of interest in the game. |
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The whole process is fogged in confusion, despite the fact that the new operator has to be up and running by September 2001. The rejection of Camelot was a genuine shock. |
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If Camelot had a heart, they would bung the Nylans a token reward. |
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The developer called the floor plan Camelot. |
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Camelot chief executive Dianne Thompson said that daydreaming provided escape from the pressures of modern life. |
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With Uther gone, Arthur rules Camelot like a testy student on work experience, and as Morgana's evil-doing gets ever more daft, the pressure on Merlin's shoulders grows. |
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He outdid himself over the weekend, for example, by casting Camelot as ipecac — and saying that when he long ago encountered John F. Kennedy's words on the rightful separation of church and state, he felt like throwing up. |
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An unfavourable variance in the results of the Camelot Info stores due to lower sales resulting from the closing of two locations was offset by increased sales at Archambault stores and the Paragraphe Bookstore. |
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First, the Groupe Archambault, owned by Quebecor, owns 15 locations plus an English-language bookstore, Paragraph, in addition to having taken over the Camelot bookstores. |
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In Edmonton, Camelot, and Quebec the number actually used was small enough that all books issued to LPOA users and returned to the managing office were requested. |
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In the poem, The Lady of Shalott lived in a castle close to King Arthur's Camelot and was held in a spell until she saw the reflection of Sir Lancelot in a mirror. |
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Camelot has become a permanent fixture in interpretations of the Arthurian legend. |
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A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, a novel by Mark Twain in 1889, takes place in Camelot. |
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According to an interview with Adam Horowitz, Camelot is a few days ride away from the Enchanted Forest and Arendelle. |
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Shortly after he recovers, he returns to Camelot after being found by Sir Percival and Sir Hector. |
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Burton made a triumphant return to the stage with Moss Hart's 1960 Broadway production of Camelot as King Arthur. |
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A few years after the Grey Gardens film hit art houses, Ebersole was touring with Richard Burton in Camelot. |
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Camelot also suffered severe distribution problems on a Lotto relaunch maildrop of pre-filled play-slips to 18 million homes. |
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The move has been sanctioned by Lottery watchdog Oflot and Camelot bosses hope it will boost ticket sales by pounds 10 million a week. |
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The ground sloth Megalonyx from the Pleistocene Camelot local fauna, Dorchester County, South Carolina. |
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One concerns Camelot, usually envisioned as a doomed utopia of chivalric virtue, undone by the fatal flaws of Arthur and Sir Lancelot. |
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The references especially come into play in Heartfire, the fifth book in the series, where much of the story occurs in Camelot. |
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The romancers' versions of Camelot drew on earlier descriptions of Arthur's fabulous court. |
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The romancers' versions of Camelot draw on earlier traditions of Arthur's fabulous court. |
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Malory's identification of Camelot as Winchester was probably partially inspired by the latter city's history. |
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In 1542, John Leland reported the locals around Cadbury Castle, formerly known as Camalet, in Somerset considered it to be the original Camelot. |
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Following the arguments of David Dumville, Alcock felt the site was too late and too uncertain to be a tenable Camelot. |
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From Geoffrey's grand description of Caerleon, Camelot gains its impressive architecture, its many churches and the chivalry and courtesy of its inhabitants. |
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The symbolism of Camelot so impressed Alfred, Lord Tennyson that he wrote up a prose sketch on the castle as one of his earliest attempts to treat the Arthurian legend. |
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Recently, Professor Peter Fields, formerly of Bangor University, has suggested that the Camulodunum in West Yorkshire is the likely location of King Arthur's Camelot. |
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Camelot had been awarded the first licence to run the National Lottery on May 25, 1994, by Oflot after beating off competition from seven other suitors. |
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O'Brien last won the race with Henrythenavigator in 2008 and Camelot looks to be his first-string after heading the market through the winter months. |
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Despite this, Cadbury remains widely associated with Camelot. |
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The area's connections with Camelot and Camlann are merely speculative. |
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Mehta believes the Camelot, which opened in 1973, has potential. |
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Camelot is a castle and court associated with the legendary King Arthur. |
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It features the Knights of the Round Table being summoned into the times of the Crusades, where they swiftly conquer Jerusalem and build a new Camelot over its ruins. |
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