Each year on this date we commemorate our ancestors with a special ceremony. |
|
She had turned him down for a date before, but he persisted and asked her again. |
|
There is an interesting sequel to my date with her that I'll share with you later. |
|
Other distinguishing characteristics were its calculation of the date of Easter and the style of the tonsure haircut that clerics wore. |
|
Godwin himself died in 1053 and although Harold succeeded to his earldom of Wessex, none of his other brothers were earls at this date. |
|
He was almost done with the paper, but tomorrow's due date meant it would be down to the wire. |
|
He was almost done with the paper, but tomorrow's due date meant it would come down to the wire. |
|
As he was not close to the line of succession to the throne, Henry's date of birth was not officially documented. |
|
Is this going to take long? I've got a hot date to drill the flautist at the symphony tonight. |
|
As far as I know, he isn't attached, so I'm going to invite him out on a date. |
|
Surveys cover an estate or region on a particular date, rather like a modern inventory. |
|
Some authorities date the start of the War of the Roses from the death of Humphrey. |
|
This event is known as the Gregorian mission and is the date the Church of England generally marks as the beginning of its formal history. |
|
The Synod of Whitby established the Roman date for Easter and the Roman style of monastic tonsure in England. |
|
In the event that you are unable to attend the meeting as scheduled, please propose an alternative date and time. |
|
The modern convention is to use the old calendar for the date and month while using the new for the year. |
|
Mark Horton of the University of Bristol said he was not convinced that this news proved the ring did not date to the 16th century. |
|
Since that date, a few further changes have been introduced to the Oxford standard text. |
|
Six honorary fellows have been elected to date, including Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve. |
|
Mary must have died shortly after the birth of Elizabeth, although there does not appear to be any surviving record of the date. |
|
|
My daughter is babysitting for the Morgans at number ten, who are going out on a date night. |
|
It opened in 1761 and was the longest canal constructed in Britain to that date. |
|
I'm a bit nervous. Could you keep me company while I wait for my blind date to arrive? |
|
On 14 October, the heaviest night attack to date saw 380 German bombers from Luftflotte 3 hit London. |
|
The colorful tassels of the visible ends of the hierarchs' epitrachelions suggest a late-fourteenth century date. |
|
It is time for Adobe to announce the end-of-life date for Flash and to ask the browsers to set killbits on the same day. |
|
In other systems, such as the Dutch and the Belgian, the ruling party or coalition has some flexibility in determining the election date. |
|
All British, Irish and Commonwealth citizens over the age of 18 on the date of the election were permitted to vote. |
|
The bidental is one of the more problematic structures of the colony and no consensus has yet emerged as to its date. |
|
Of course they fall madly and deeply in love, as Biker Dude learns to respect a girl who won't knock boots on the first date. |
|
The oldest rocks date back to the early Tertiary Era, some 60 million years ago. |
|
Before that date, however, the Liberal Government of William Ewart Gladstone fell. |
|
For Europe as a whole, 1500 is often considered to be the end of the Middle Ages, but there is no universally agreed upon end date. |
|
Well, in the mercy of God we are normally unaware of our personal expiration date. |
|
She enrolled at the university under false pretenses, giving an invented birth date and lying about her qualifications. |
|
Reviews come into effect on 1 April in the year following the date the reorganisation order is made. |
|
The service of EE and Vodafone commenced on the same date as the announcement. |
|
Well dressing ceremonies are held in most of the villages during the spring and summer months, in a tradition said to date from pagan times. |
|
The knowledge of a filarial infection of the region of the eye seems to date from the time of Magellan. |
|
It was a good date but the food at the restaurant was so flabbergastingly excellent I could barely think of anything else to talk about. |
|
|
This was one flirty dress. Way too sultry for a first date, especially with someone she might have no real interest in. |
|
In the western hemisphere there is a need to date all descriptions concerning diversities in genderland. |
|
It's embarrassing when I remember how much nonsense I gibbered at you on our first date. |
|
The big homecoming game, however, was canceled when the, uh, president got shot, as was the date itself when I didn't behave aggrievedly enough. |
|
Her mother came back in and pulled her out into the hallway as if she were bundling her off on a date and whispered urgently to her. |
|
Britain has participated in every modern Olympic Games to date and is third in the medal count. |
|
Use of a blue background for the Saint Andrew's Cross is said to date from at least the 15th century. |
|
When I came back Elaine had left on her date with the short-order cook, and Pam was watching Valley of the Dolls on cablevision. |
|
The table shows the top 21 countries of birth of residents in 2011, the date of the last UK Census. |
|
For example it led to the incessant Clana in seasons 6 and 7 when it was long passed its expiry date. |
|
The province of Schleswig has proved rich in prehistoric antiquities that date apparently from the 4th and 5th centuries. |
|
The support of Mr. Albert Igoin, a Spinoza reader and connaisseur of long date, is particularly appreciated. |
|
The majority of the prehistoric remains on Dartmoor date back to the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age. |
|
More coffee is consumed, a movie date is arranged, coupledom achieved and, naturally, nuptials performed. |
|
Using the project plan, the team started to work out different scenarios to crash the schedule and bring the date to the regulatory deadline. |
|
Cricket has long been a popular sport in the Northeast of England and is said to date back to Elizabethan times. |
|
Most current Yorkshire breweries date from the Industrial Revolution of the late 18th and early 19th century. |
|
First mentions of amber deposits on the South coast of the Baltic Sea date back to the 12th century. |
|
The most recent case was in early 1987, which was the most severe winter in Scandinavia since that date. |
|
This meant that in discussing conflicts between kingdoms, the date would have to be given in the regnal years of all the kings involved. |
|
|
His final preoccupation is over the precise date of Easter, which he writes about at length. |
|
In the end he is pleased to note that the Irish Church was saved from error by accepting the correct date for Easter. |
|
Revised editions appeared throughout the twentieth century to keep it up to date with changes in English usage. |
|
The oldest and most spectacular Saxon site found in France to date is Vron, in Picardy. |
|
The word is known to date from the 10th century or earlier, as it appears in the literary Armes Prydein. |
|
However, the accuracy of this date is uncertain, as several radiocarbon plateaus exist around this time. |
|
The concepts of Europe and Asia as distinct continents date back to antiquity and their borders are geologically arbitrary. |
|
We really hit it off on the first date, so we decided to meet the week after. |
|
It is very easy to fall prey to a date rapist if you are attractive and alone in a bar in a new city. |
|
The carvings are difficult to date, but are morphologically similar to late Bronze Age weapons. |
|
The project was able to successfully date such features as the Lesser Cursus, Coneybury Henge and several other smaller features. |
|
They were able to date the erection of some bluestones to 2300 BC, although this may not reflect the earliest erection of stones at Stonehenge. |
|
The only known comparable sites of similar date are only a quarter of the size of Avebury. |
|
Since dating behaviors are derived from the prostitution model, date rape, instead of being a crime of violence,... The date rapist is confused. |
|
Augustus' excuse was that the interval for the games was 110 years, not 100, but his date actually did not qualify under either reasoning. |
|
Martin Lister was the first to recognise that the Multangular Tower was Roman in date in a 1683 paper with the Royal Society. |
|
A work of uncertain date, the Origo focuses on military and political events, to the neglect of cultural and religious matters. |
|
Saint Patrick's Day is observed on 17 March, the supposed date of his death. |
|
While it is not considered appropriate for a professor to date his student, there is no such concern once the semester has ended. |
|
So much has been said about Europe's long-awaited date with destiny that it was hard to sort out the predictable hyperbole from the reality. |
|
|
Drainage of excess water and waste were common practices in camps as well as the permanent medical structures, which come at a later date. |
|
Because of the limited number of sources, there is no certainty about the date, location, or details of the fighting. |
|
The maps in surviving manuscripts of Ptolemy's Geography, however, only date from about 1300, after the text was rediscovered by Maximus Planudes. |
|
Ancient bronze drums from Thailand and Vietnam date back 2,000 years. |
|
These ploughs date back to the days of the steam engine and the horse. |
|
The only local authorities since that date have been district councils. |
|
The experience to date clearly illustrated Langley's general approach to innovation in technology and set a pattern for all future aerodromic work. |
|
Already, at this very early date, the ritualists were moving towards the ideal of ahimsa that would become the indispensable virtue of the Indian Axial Age. |
|
The very date which put them beyond the pale as belligerents was that which they seem to have chosen in order to prove what active and valiant soldiers they still remained. |
|
He is guarded with the details of his upbringing because he thinks that he will be able to turn them into cash at some later date with a book deal. |
|
The problem with bookware is that it quickly gets out of date. |
|
Dacryphilia is a non-normative sexual interest that involves enjoyment or arousal from tears and crying, and to date has never been researched empirically. |
|
These diarized meditations of Maximilien Robespierre date from early June 1793, when the Revolution was confronted by armed conflict on every front and by raging civil war. |
|
The drop-dead date for the completion of the project is tomorrow. |
|
To date, Daphnia and fish, particularly zebrafish and fathead minnow, appear to be the most common model organisms for ecotoxicogenomics studies employing DNA microarrays. |
|
The fossil record is also poor for moa and the aepyornid elephant birds, in that both are mainly known from remains that date from historical times. |
|
You have an expiration date, and despite your wanting to claim control over life circumstances, you're not entitled to know when your expiration date will be. |
|
As the third person along on their date, I felt like a fifth wheel. |
|
I hope the other report will be completed at a very early date, but to put a timescale on it would be to give hostage to fortune and I am not prepared to do that. |
|
But, in this story, it is perfectly acceptable for a young Latino man to choose to date, and to want to date a brown girl, a white girl, a black girl or a halfie. |
|
|
The exact date of composition for both of these works is unknown. |
|
At Hortus Bulborum you will find heirloom narcissi that date back at least to the 15th century and famous old tulips like 'Duc van Tol' and its sports. |
|
The exact date of transition can be a matter of interpretation. |
|
Most of these date back to the 14th century and sometimes earlier. |
|
In terms of energy, in this area alone, the potential gas deposits could be more than the total natural gas extracted from the entire North Sea to date. |
|
A more difficult problem is the question of the date at which a new year began, since the modern custom of starting the year on 1 January was not universal at that time. |
|
Deposits containing human bone date from as early as 3000 BC, when the ditch and bank were first dug, and continued for at least another five hundred years. |
|
A small outer bank beyond the ditch could also date to this period. |
|
We are enjoying a long engagement, but haven't yet set a date. |
|
The date 432 was probably chosen to minimise the contribution of Palladius, who was known to have been sent to Ireland in 431, and maximise that of Patrick. |
|
These works thus date from a century and a half after Patrick's death. |
|
The Normans were in contact with England from an early date. |
|
In the xeric regions of Balochistan, date palm and Ephedra are common. |
|
The thing is I am majorly stressing because I have no prom date set up. |
|
The user inputs his date of birth and the computer displays his age. |
|
After this date everything thus previously rooted in tradition was questioned and often replaced by new concepts in the light of philosophical reason. |
|
The exact date of the war's end is also not universally agreed upon. |
|
Equipment is badly maintained and out of date medicines are used. |
|
The Conservative Party and the Labour Party have been the two biggest parties since 1922, and have supplied all UK prime ministers since that date. |
|
The practice is believed to date back to a year in the reign of Elizabeth I, when, lacking a pen, she decided to use her bodkin to mark the name instead. |
|
|
However the arms were in use some months before Tyler's death, and the tradition that Walworth's dagger is depicted may date from the late 17th century. |
|
Besides its sporting significance the regatta is an important date on the English social calendar alongside events like Royal Ascot and Wimbledon. |
|