意味 | 共起表現 |
「Exeter.」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 1758件
Bristol Rovers paid | Exeter a transfer fee of £350 for his services in 195 |
d a ship for future service, and so retired to | Exeter a few years later, where he lived peacefully u |
y V, and 'Tis Pity She's a Whore at Northcott, | Exeter; A Little Night Music and Mrs. Warren's Profes |
His father, Joseph Hooker of | Exeter, a member of the same family as the celebrated |
y science at the Royal Albert Memorial College | Exeter, a forerunner of the contemporary Exeter Unive |
Simon was elected to the see of | Exeter about 13 April 1214 and consecrated on 5 Octob |
nolds, Latin Reginaldus) (born at Pinhorn near | Exeter, about 1544; died at Antwerp, 24 August 1594) |
Nance graduated from the Phillips | Exeter Academy in 1950. |
He attended Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire for high scho |
After studying at Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire and then grad |
Bob Fisher attended Phillips | Exeter Academy and Princeton University, where he rec |
s the brother of Dr. Lewis Perry, Principal of | Exeter Academy from 1914 to 1946. |
He attended Philips | Exeter Academy from 1954 to 1958, followed by Harvard |
MacMullen graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy and summa cum laude from Harvard Colle |
He graduated from the Phillips | Exeter Academy in 1967 and attended Yale University, |
e of 15, Butler started attending the Phillips | Exeter Academy preparatory school in New Hampshire, w |
He went to school in the Philips | Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, then he went to Yale |
Mankiewicz was a graduate of Phillips | Exeter Academy (1955-59) and Yale University (1959-63 |
chool in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, and Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire. |
t stories have been set in and around Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire where Irving |
Elizabeth (Dennet) Phillips, founded Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, in 1781. |
Bauer graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy in 1970, from Harvard University in 19 |
Smith was educated at Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, and eventual |
Jay Rockefeller graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy (1955) and from Harvard University (19 |
f Boston, Massachusetts, and attended Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, and graduate |
Hamilton College and was Principal of Phillips | Exeter Academy between 1974 and 1987. |
He was educated initially at | Exeter Academy and then in France and Germany , and w |
After studying at Phillips | Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, Gager went on to rec |
ngham, Massachusetts, and educated at Phillips | Exeter Academy and at Harvard University (A.B., 1889) |
sion actor Jack Gilpin, a graduate of Phillips | Exeter Academy and Harvard University. |
Christopher Kimball is a graduate of Phillips | Exeter Academy and Columbia University with a degree |
career as an instructor in history at Phillips | Exeter Academy in New Hampshire from 1950 until 1952 |
he Buckley School (New York City) and Phillips | Exeter Academy in New Hampshire. |
He graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy in 1956, and Yale University in 1960. |
After graduating from Phillips | Exeter Academy he studied medicine and started a prac |
He attended Phillips | Exeter Academy and went on to Yale University, where |
Gilpin is a graduate of Phillips | Exeter Academy (class of 1969) and Harvard University |
and Johanna Bluethenthal, he attended Phillips | Exeter Academy prior to attending Princeton Universit |
He graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy in 1887 and Dartmouth College with the |
n the New York City area, and went to Phillips | Exeter Academy in New England; after college, he work |
altimore, Maryland and graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy in 1969. |
Reagan McCrary, he graduated from the Phillips | Exeter Academy in 1928 and from Yale University in 19 |
field, New Hampshire, Harper attended Phillips | Exeter Academy in 1794. |
He graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy and attended Princeton University. |
Dinsmoor studied at Phillips | Exeter Academy and Columbia University, taking time o |
At age 14, he entered Phillips | Exeter Academy and graduated by age 16. |
f 1880-1881, was briefly a student at Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter. |
He attended Phillips | Exeter Academy where he graduated in 1915. |
death, Perry was a recent graduate of Phillips | Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, one of the m |
Mike was educated at Phillips | Exeter Academy and Harvard University. |
where he attended the public schools, Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire and Pratt Insti |
He was educated at Phillips | Exeter Academy, graduating in 1922, and Yale Universi |
. Hassan is the 14th Principal of the Phillips | Exeter Academy, in office from June 2009. |
He studied at Phillips | Exeter Academy, State Normal School at Moorhead, Minn |
he and Knowles concurrently attended Phillips | Exeter Academy, with Vidal two years ahead. |
Kuriyama studied at Phillips | Exeter Academy, and then Harvard, receiving an A.B. d |
Haverhill, Massachusetts, he attended Phillips | Exeter Academy, and graduated from Harvard University |
r in Provincetown in 2006, and at the Phillips | Exeter Academy, in 2007. |
erboro, New Hampshire, Smith attended Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire, and Phillips A |
Hull attended the public schools and Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire, in 1885. |
Massachusetts, and was graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. |
Sewall attended Philips | Exeter Academy, graduated from Williams College and r |
He attended Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. |
ell is an alumnus of both Harvard and Phillips | Exeter Academy, and received his medical degree from |
4, 1912 in Rye, New York and attended Phillips | Exeter Academy, graduating in 1930. |
Matatics graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy, and earned his B.A. from the Universi |
method of instruction, starting with Phillips | Exeter Academy, and spreading to St. Paul's, The Lawr |
New York City, Doe was graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. |
arris attended the common schools and Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. |
Born in Epping, Plumer attended Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. |
He attended the public schools and Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. |
He was educated at Phillips | Exeter Academy, graduating in 1915, Yale College 1915 |
Plimpton attended Phillips | Exeter Academy, and received his bachelor's degree fr |
ts, gymnasiums of Bowdoin College and Phillips | Exeter Academy, various buildings of Milton Academy, |
then taught at the Fieldston School, Phillips | Exeter Academy, Hamilton College and Washington and L |
the local public schools, he attended Phillips | Exeter Academy, and then Dartmouth College, graduatin |
president of the board of trustees of Phillips | Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire, 1795-1827, and |
He was educated at the Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
He is also a graduate of Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
She is also an honors graduate of Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
the Oyster River School District and Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
William Penn Charter School, and then Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
hen both attended a summer session at Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
d Lincoln's previous boarding school, Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
lo earned his high school degree from Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
e, Potter attended common schools and Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
He attended Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
e, he emigrated to the U.S. to attend Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
883 to 1887 Kittredge taught Latin at Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
He graduated from Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
At 14, he attended Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
an in 1955 as a history instructor at Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
Unitarian clergyman, and educated at Phillips | Exeter Academy. |
ward IV pursued Warwick and Clarence as far as | Exeter after the Battle of Lose-coat Field. |
n 1878 as Badgery's Siding, but was renamed to | Exeter, after the name of a local farm, on 12 August |
Country, between 1807 and 1808 he practised at | Exeter, afterwards working in London for some years, |
An aerial view of RAF | Exeter airfield on 20 May 1944, showing the triangula |
On Monday 16 August 2010, | Exeter Airport was forced to close due to technical p |
e first 10 years of his career at RAF Lyneham, | Exeter Airport and RAF Honington. |
Rockbeare is located near | Exeter Airport and the city of Exeter. |
eral-aviation airports include: Sequoia Field, | Exeter Airport, Woodlake Airport, Porterville Municip |
Without her, HMS | Exeter, Ajax and Achilles engaged the German raider A |
n and the canonries and prebends of Armagh and | Exeter, all of which he is to resign." |
The Baptist Church in | Exeter, also known as Chestnut Hill Baptist Church, i |
iversity of Manchester and UMIST), Bristol and | Exeter also practice such a tradition aimed to streng |
Exeter also served in Operation Granby, during the 19 | |
A son, Simon de | Exeter, also served as Chief Justice of the Common Pl |
ich ran through Bampton, Devon and Tiverton to | Exeter, although the actual junction between the two |
since 1961 when its owner the 6th Marquess of | Exeter, an Olympic gold medallist in athletics and IO |
w in Suffolk, to which Dr. Ross, the bishop of | Exeter, an intimate friend and patron of Ashby, added |
The | Exeter and Crediton line was a link in what became th |
on broadcast from studios in St. David's Hill, | Exeter, and overlooking the harbour in Torquay. |
It is headquartered in | Exeter and was a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index be |
e began the construction of a new cathedral at | Exeter, and he probably divided the diocese into arch |
re Henry Harwood and allocated to Force G (HMS | Exeter and Cumberland). |
In May 1539, Montagu, Lady Salisbury, | Exeter and others were attainted, as her father had b |
d by this time taken over both the Bristol and | Exeter and the East Somerset lines, had to run trains |
hcliffe's daily newspaper centres at Plymouth, | Exeter and Torquay. |
n as Marsh Mills and the road to Plympton then | Exeter and London. |
the Express & Echo is a paid-for newspaper for | Exeter and its surrounding area. |
ew of Haytor as seen from the A38 road between | Exeter and Plymouth. |
eart Plymouth and merge the station with Heart | Exeter and Heart Torbay, Heart North Devon and Heart |
tle is known of him, except that he played for | Exeter and Starcross in 1900. |
d merge the station with Heart Plymouth, Heart | Exeter and Heart Torbay and Heart South Devon as part |
He attended Phillips | Exeter and Harvard (class of 1893). |
South Western Ambulance Service is located at | Exeter and is manned twenty four hours a day, everyda |
Duryard is an ancient area of | Exeter and was once the hunting land of the Anglo-Sax |
of complementary medicine at the University of | Exeter and University of Plymouth, notes: "No credibl |
The final | Exeter and Norwich orders were made on 24 March follo |
Exeter and Barnstaple fell to Lord-General Thomas Fai | |
St. Paul's, London; and in 1262 prebendary of | Exeter and canon of Wells Cathedral. |
In 2000, he was appointed the 70th Bishop of | Exeter and became a Lord Spiritual with a seat at the |
sh on Ladysmith (Royal Albert Memorial Museum, | Exeter), and Sons of the City (private collection). |
d merge the station with Heart Plymouth, Heart | Exeter and Heart Torbay and Heart North Devon as part |
was the only son of John Holland, 2nd Duke of | Exeter and his first wife Lady Anne Stafford. |
rote of his experiences both in command of the | Exeter and as a Prisoner of War in Japan in the book |
orm 2 and is the main platform for services to | Exeter and beyond. |
th's widow married Thomas Cecil, first earl of | Exeter, and survived till 1663. |
tephen and the villages of Ailsa Craig, Lucan, | Exeter and Parkhill, and to exclude the townships of |
rloo to Ilfracombe, made its only stop between | Exeter and Barnstaple at Eggesford. |
In 1950, Horabin stood instead in | Exeter, and Roper won the North Cornwall seat with a |
He was born in | Exeter and died in Dover. |
n of the railroad in the 1850s, as well as the | Exeter and Hampton Trolley line, made Hampton's ocean |
Part of their scheme was to capture Bristol, | Exeter and Plymouth. |
Educated at the University of | Exeter and Cuddesdon College, Frayling has lectured o |
hichester, Miles Coverdale, formerly Bishop of | Exeter, and John Hodgkins, Bishop of Bedford. |
on is on the former Southern main line between | Exeter and Plymouth via Okehampton. |
The B.A.A. clubhouse on the corner of | Exeter and Boylston Streets in Boston's Back Bay was |
Hugh Park was born near | Exeter and educated at Blundell's School and Sidney S |
St James Park is a football stadium in | Exeter and is the home of Exeter City F.C. The stadiu |
ween the Hele Charity trustees and the city of | Exeter and governors of St John's Foundlings Hospital |
t Foundation Grammar School, the University of | Exeter, and City of London Polytechnic. |
ved to East Devon, where he attended school in | Exeter and Exmouth. |
ru; Romeo and Juliet at the Northcott Theatre, | Exeter and Lunch at The King's Head Theatre, London. |
as consecrated on 25 January 1778 as bishop of | Exeter, and held with the bishopric, as was the case |
lton found patrons in William Alley, bishop of | Exeter, and Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford. |
There were many notable failures to connect | Exeter and the South West to the national canal and r |
by-election as a Member of Parliament (MP) for | Exeter, and held the seat until 1830. |
locomotives for working express trains between | Exeter and Plymouth. |
in West Greenwich and flows due south through | Exeter and into South Kingstown where it converges wi |
is based at Clyst St. Mary on the outskirts of | Exeter and Cornwall's Crealy is based at Tredinnick i |
Attainder was brought against the Marquess of | Exeter and he was found guilty of treason by his peer |
The second son of John Holland, 1st Duke of | Exeter and Elizabeth of Lancaster, his maternal grand |
John was a schoolmaster in | Exeter, and family legend maintained that his grandfa |
he was licensed to officiate in the Diocese of | Exeter, and came to live in Exmouth, Devon. |
ouncil Chamber, Northcote House, University of | Exeter, and another by Bryan Organ in Merton College, |
divided into five deaneries: Cornwall, Dorset, | Exeter and North and East Devon, Plymouth, and Torbay |
bour Party, said that the bill would "shut out | Exeter and Norwich from the opportunity to become uni |
Sir Philip Courtenay of Powderham Castle, near | Exeter, and a grandson of Hugh de Courtenay, 10th Ear |
ool is to serve residents of Potomac Crossing, | Exeter, and Edward's Landing. |
udicial review causing elections to be held in | Exeter and Norwich in September 2010. |
Lau Kong-wah graduated from the University of | Exeter and the City Polytechnic of Hong Kong. |
n the Holy Land, had the custody of the castle | Exeter and Launceston delivered into his hands, 1191. |
of William Wood (1738-6?), a serge maker from | Exeter and Tiverton, and his wife Catherine Cluse (di |
bled and is now St Loye's Foundation), also in | Exeter, and Queen Elizabeth College in Leatherhead, S |
nown as Balwin de Meules et du Sap, Baldwin of | Exeter and Baldwin the Sheriff.. Baldwin was granted |
05 Tomasz studied at the Met Office college in | Exeter and trained as a forecaster for aviation. |
l town of Sidmouth, fifteen miles southeast of | Exeter and ten miles from the M5 motorway. |
He was a clerk of the diocese of | Exeter and educated in physical sciences. |
e first commercial local radio station for the | Exeter and Torbay areas was DevonAir Radio, which was |
nsion to the Old Bailey and civic buildings in | Exeter and Bury St Edmunds. |
g Cambridge he was for some time a lecturer at | Exeter, and then succeeded his old master, White, as |
t to Chichester Cathedral, he held ministry in | Exeter and St Albans. |
land Main Line from London Waterloo station to | Exeter and close to the Great Western Railway's Wilto |
in the Teign valley, 13 miles (21 km) west of | Exeter and 9 miles (14 km) south east of Okehampton. |
n 13 March 1307 Stapledon was chosen Bishop of | Exeter, and was consecrated on 13 October 1308. |
Gidleigh Park in Devon, the Royal Clarence in | Exeter, and developing the Abode hotels concept with |
1660-?), married John Cecil, 5th Earl of | Exeter and had issue. |
um, Liverpool Museum, The Royal Albert Museum, | Exeter, and the American Museum of Natural History, N |
He died on 7 September 1696 in | Exeter, and was buried near Laugharne in Carmarthensh |
Gibbons was born in 1965 in | Exeter and raised on a farm. |
right in the middle of Devon half way between | Exeter and Barnstaple on the A377, nestled in a valle |
ew buildings were designed by Hayward & Son of | Exeter, and built in red Halberton stone, the foundat |
ouncil sponsor the Sunday Rover trains between | Exeter and Okehampton. |
He was an Archdeacon of | Exeter and a papal chaplain before Pope Martin IV pro |
e been the sister of Paul Aurelian, Sidwell of | Exeter and Wulvela but this is hotly debated. |
ural change orders that would have established | Exeter and Norwich as unitary authorities and prevent |
He studied at the University of | Exeter and Manchester and then went on to be a Resear |
501, having previously been made archdeacon of | Exeter and Wells and canon of Windsor under Henry VII |
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