This potent fungus, which also kills termites, doesn't harm bees or affect their queen's production. |
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A team of sumpter horses, each one in the care of its own sumpterrnan, riding his own horse, was sent up to carry the queen's baggage. |
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The reliefs in the temple tell the story of the queen's divine birth,, her conquests and achievements. |
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There are some members of parliament who are being quoted grousing about the queen's role in all of this. |
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It is a fact that few made such a practice as he of complaining so vociferously, or so unjustifiably, about their ill usage at the queen's hands. |
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This records the queen's visit to Coventry in August 1566 and makes it clear that Elizabeth rode on horseback. |
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With the help of a decrepit Cheshire cat, Alice must battle the undead and the queen's guards in order to save Wonderland from a horrible fate. |
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It's some dead queen's birthday and what better way to wish someone a happy birthday than to bounce the weekend away? |
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Trailing twin flower, bunchberries, queen's cup, and the tiniest of woodland orchids might be found. |
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The queen's principal role was as bearer and transmitter of royalty, of which she took possession on the death of her husband. |
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Mistress Dina said my milady must come to the queen's private quarters right away. |
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Indeed, a queen's cloak, red linen, and entire sets of garb were traded for land. |
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The dead queen's coffin, draped in black velvet on an open car, was drawn to Westminster by six horses through streets lined with torch-bearers. |
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I toss opportunities like coins, and call tails when I've already caught a glimpse of the queen's crown. |
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The queen's bedchamber sits daintily festooned with floral pinks and lilacs in a combination with gold, overlooking the south parterre. |
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George Buchanan, once the queen's rhapsodist, provided the immediate, official version. |
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However, some insects selfishly lay their own eggs in empty cells rather than taking care of the queen's eggs. |
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A new royal barge, emblazoned in silver and gold and with elaborate wainscoting, was commissioned, and trimmed with the king and queen's regalia. |
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The condensation visible when an object is heated in an alembic was sometimes called the queen's tears. |
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Churchill, who was in office when Elizabeth acceded to the throne in 1952, is thought to be the queen's favorite prime minister. |
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In the 1840s, the Ardverikie Estate was leased by the Duke of Abercorn, a senior aide to Prince Albert, the queen's husband. |
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By the end of the decade the bishops began to realize that they were prisoners of the queen's immobilism, committed to enforcing her settlement rather than improving it. |
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In addition to bringing Brittany to the crown, Anne left an indelible mark on French court life by introducing the concept of the queen's maids of honor. |
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His business gradually increased, and having received a patent of precedence, he was on the 2nd of November 1872 called within the bar as a queen's counsel. |
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The winner of the international beauty competition held in Bangkok in May, Glebova was to open the festival last weekend sporting her official beauty queen's regalia. |
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For now, she savors that special day when color faded into the background and a homecoming queen's parade was broadcast live on national television for two hours. |
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The queen's cousin, Prince Michael of Kent, married in a civil ceremony in Vienna, but no member of the royal family has ever contracted a civil marriage in Britain. |
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Payments were made instead to courtiers to influence the queen's choice. |
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And she was at Balmoral, the queen's Scottish estate and purloined a few letters from Prince Charles' briefcase, sent them down to me via an intermediary. |
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More important for Brienne than the king's disengagement and eeyorish bad temper, however, was the consistency of the queen's favour. |
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The queen's maternal relatives, the House of Guise, gained an ascendancy over the young king. |
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It may have been written by or with the input of the king or queen's advisers, but, the monarch, as supreme governor, was the principal author. |
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Higham argues that they had been part of the queen's dower lands, which, when Ecgfrith remarried, his new queen wanted to recover. |
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Some European king and queen's crowns were made of gold, and gold was used for the bridal crown since antiquity. |
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Soon after the queen's coronation, Henry and Catherine had set out on separate tours of England. |
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In August 1687 Count William Nassau de Zuylestein was sent to England, ostensibly to send condolences due to the death of the queen's mother. |
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Eventually the king backed the queen's opponents and attempted to divorce her. |
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This flow of foreign visitors was captured for the queen's entertainment in William Shakespeare's play, The Merry Wives of Windsor. |
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From 1254 to 1257, Edward was under the influence of his mother's relatives, known as the Savoyards, the most notable of whom was Peter of Savoy, the queen's uncle. |
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The ingenious adventuress, who may have become Rohan's mistress, formed a plan to make her fortune out of the cardinal's passion for power and the queen's passion for gems. |
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The formality of the pose is reduced by the queen's arm round her husband. |
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Tears filled the eyes of some of the people heading to work that morning who heard the strains of music in the deposed queen's harden, among its tamarind and monkeypod trees. |
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In the queen's bedchamber, Hamlet and Gertrude fight bitterly. |
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He would discharge it without any burden to the queen's coffers. |
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The queen's charter also said that Raleigh was supposed to establish a base from which to send privateers on raids against the treasure fleets of Spain. |
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The people of London shut the city gates and refused to supply food to the queen's army, which was looting the surrounding counties of Hertfordshire and Middlesex. |
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The castles were key military centres, but were also designed to function as royal palaces, capable of supporting the king and queen's households in secure comfort. |
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In 1549, the defeat of the English with French support led to the marriage of Mary to the French dauphin and a regency over Scotland for the queen's mother, Mary of Guise. |
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