意味 | 共起表現 |
「Nottinghamshire,」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 1049件
9. 'Annals of | Nottinghamshire; a new and popular history of the county |
Bingham, | Nottinghamshire, a town |
ughter of Francis Willoughby of Wollaton, | Nottinghamshire, a Fellow of the Royal Society, and a wri |
Clumber Park, | Nottinghamshire, a room with columned screens at either e |
Fernwood, | Nottinghamshire, a parish in Newark and Sherwood District |
He made his List A debut against | Nottinghamshire a month later, scoring 74 as opener and a |
a settlement in the Broxtowe district of | Nottinghamshire, about five miles west of Nottingham. |
In 2009, 68.5% of pupils in | Nottinghamshire achieved 5 or more A* - Cs at GCSE |
in a number of counties but particularly | Nottinghamshire after the Norman conquest. |
Gloucestershire to draw the match against | Nottinghamshire after being made to follow on. |
, if ultimately unsuccessful, 121 against | Nottinghamshire after Worcestershire had fallen to 56/5 i |
t GCSE it gets the fourth best results in | Nottinghamshire, after the two schools in West Bridgford, |
debut in the 1921 County Championship for | Nottinghamshire against Leicestershire. |
Armstrong made his first-class deubt for | Nottinghamshire against the Marylebone Cricket Club in 18 |
Hindson made his first-class debut for | Nottinghamshire against Cambridge University in 1992. |
year he had played a three day match for | Nottinghamshire against the touring West Indians and made |
made a single first-class appearance for | Nottinghamshire against Oxford University in 1930. |
Oram made his first-class debut for | Nottinghamshire against the touring Australians in 1997. |
Robinson made his first-class debut for | Nottinghamshire against Derbyshire in the 1896 County Cha |
Curzon made his first-class debut for | Nottinghamshire against Northamptonshire in the 1978 Coun |
and Craven District, and was selected for | Nottinghamshire against Leicestershire but had to withdra |
He made his first-class debut for | Nottinghamshire against Middlesex in 1968, a season in wh |
He played one more match for | Nottinghamshire against Middlesex, when he took a wicket |
In 1843 he played a match for | Nottinghamshire against Hampshire. |
He made his only half-century, 57, for | Nottinghamshire against Surrey at The Oval in July 1869, |
Chambers made his first-class debut for | Nottinghamshire against Middlesex in the 1903 County Cham |
ris played a single first-class match for | Nottinghamshire against Sussex in 1886 at the County Grou |
1788 at Wilford House, the family home in | Nottinghamshire, aged 71. |
He died in his hometown of Warsop, | Nottinghamshire, aged 80. |
were purchased in 1964 by the Newark and | Nottinghamshire Agricultural Society. |
airfield were purchased by the Newark and | Nottinghamshire Agricultural Society, who have since held |
Her main charity is the Lincolnshire and | Nottinghamshire Air Ambulance. |
eague, but dropped down to the more local | Nottinghamshire Alliance in 1991. |
ivil parish in the Rushcliffe district of | Nottinghamshire, although its closest town and postal add |
, daughter of Thomas Lewes of Stanford in | Nottinghamshire and widow of Richard Dashwood, third son |
The | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire trolleybus system once lin |
Restoration he regained his influence in | Nottinghamshire and from 1660, served Justice of the Peac |
laying against Leicestershire, Glamorgan, | Nottinghamshire and Cambridge. |
The average house price is the highest in | Nottinghamshire and in the top three in the East Midlands |
and one borrowed in 1930 from the nearby | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Tramways Company, (another |
Annesley Hall, | Nottinghamshire and Newstead Abbey are two stately homes |
miles (2,190 km2) including the whole of | Nottinghamshire and a small area of South Yorkshire. |
A limited company called Newark ( | Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire) Air Museum was formed i |
was once much larger, covering Yorkshire, | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire and parts of Lancashire, C |
rbyshire and a magistrate for Derbyshire, | Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire. |
irls Choir is a choir based in Mansfield, | Nottinghamshire and consists of approximately forty girls |
rley for negotiating a separate deal with | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire coal miners, without the s |
cotland and Yorkshire in 1948 and against | Nottinghamshire and Scotland in 1950 before his final gam |
He started his first-class career with | Nottinghamshire, and was awarded the NBC Denis Compton Aw |
The county boundary between | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire follows the course of the |
Grey of Cavendish, Suffolk, of Landford, | Nottinghamshire and of Sandiacre, Derbyshire, ancestor of |
He was born in Nottingham, | Nottinghamshire and died in Winnipeg, Manitoba. |
He was born in Arnold, | Nottinghamshire and died in Farnham, Surrey. |
ons north and west of Nottingham in North | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. |
He was born in Bulwell, | Nottinghamshire and educated at High Pavement School, Sta |
ited the barony and Willoughby estates in | Nottinghamshire and Warwickshire from his cousin in 1781. |
Collingham railway station in Collingham, | Nottinghamshire and was the station before Wetherby railw |
two first-class fixtures in 2010, against | Nottinghamshire and Durham. |
gion covering Derbyshire, Leicestershire, | Nottinghamshire and Rutland. |
She plays for | Nottinghamshire and Western Australia and made her Test d |
mand adult males from the local courts in | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. |
Rattlers a tramcar service opened by the | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Tramways Company. |
d Kingdom opened in 1987 near Rufford, in | Nottinghamshire and was named Sherwood Forest. |
an LE14 postcode but lies entirely within | Nottinghamshire and is not part of the civil parish of Br |
ocese covers all of the English county of | Nottinghamshire and part of South Yorkshire. |
He was born at Newark Castle, | Nottinghamshire, and baptised on 4 June 1590. |
requested by the king's commissioners for | Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire as commander-in-chief, a |
in three games during the 1899 season for | Nottinghamshire, and in the first of these against his ol |
He previously played for | Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire, winning the NBC Denis Comp |
Price was born in Ruddington, | Nottinghamshire, and died there at the age of 59. |
Widdowson was born in Bingham, | Nottinghamshire and in 1881 was working on a farm. |
th Battalion, The Sherwood Foresters (The | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment). |
He was born in Greasley, | Nottinghamshire and died in Bentley, South Yorkshire. |
he first match took place in 1913 against | Nottinghamshire and the last in 1952 against Kent. |
He was born in Kingston, | Nottinghamshire and educated at Clare College, Cambridge. |
He was born in Bulwell, | Nottinghamshire, and became a full-time official in the r |
ss South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, North | Nottinghamshire and parts of Lincolnshire. |
e history, archaeology and antiquities of | Nottinghamshire, and to support local research and conser |
cketer who played first-class cricket for | Nottinghamshire and Worcestershire between 1992 and 1998, |
The tramway was bought by | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Tramways Company in 1916. |
ght-arm medium-pace bowler who played for | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire in a three-year first-clas |
h in the 1972 Benson & Hedges Cup against | Nottinghamshire and Lancashire. |
zards such as industrial noise, as in the | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire deafness litigation, or ca |
ar the River Soar forms the boundary with | Nottinghamshire and in that county Soar Valley is an elec |
ed mainly for Nottingham Cricket Club and | Nottinghamshire and made 37 known first-class appearances |
was Justice of the Peace, High Sheriff of | Nottinghamshire and MP for Newark-on-Trent. |
Inn, to each of the Meningitis Trust, the | Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire Air Ambulance, and a fur |
rge navigation lock on the River Trent in | Nottinghamshire, and marks the tidal limit of the river. |
lass matches for Hampshire, twice against | Nottinghamshire and once against the Marylebone Cricket C |
14th Battalion of the Sherwood Foresters ( | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment) in Italy in 1943 |
am was also served by another system, the | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire trolleybus system, which w |
reserves, finding significant reserves in | Nottinghamshire and also helping to discover coal fields. |
tuated in the writer's hometown Eastwood, | Nottinghamshire and managed by Broxtowe Borough Council. |
e new Diocese of Southwell, which covered | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. |
andowner in Derbyshire and was sheriff of | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire 1170-1180 and was senescha |
eclassified as being the highest point in | Nottinghamshire and not Silverhill Woods. |
In 1966 he moved to | Nottinghamshire and played with them until 1980 when he r |
llages of Redmile and Barkestone-le-Vale, | Nottinghamshire and also Belvoir Castle. |
t going to form Worksop Rural District in | Nottinghamshire and Clowne Rural District in Derbyshire. |
in three successive games against Essex, | Nottinghamshire and Warwickshire he was back in the Secon |
ng the Erewash Valley between Awsworth in | Nottinghamshire and Ilkeston in Derbyshire. |
This resulted in Bassetlaw in | Nottinghamshire and Chesterfield and parts of the High Pe |
ch played in the Bassetlaw League and the | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Collieries League. |
ory w was then rented to Beauvale Abbey, ( | Nottinghamshire), and later, the church became parochial. |
of Berkshire, Cornwall, Devon, Hampshire, | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, Oxfordshire, Somerset and |
ar first class career including stints at | Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire before joining Essex i |
It is very close to the border with | Nottinghamshire, and runs into the towns of Aldercar (to |
pen University as an "ambassador both for | Nottinghamshire and for Britain." |
lose to the present borders of Yorkshire, | Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire; in Aethelfrith's time t |
d two County Championship matches against | Nottinghamshire and Warwickshire, followed by five more c |
anuary 1932 (1932-01-07), it replaced the | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire tramway, between the same |
ther Darrell (snr) previously represented | Nottinghamshire and Worcestershire 2nd XI's and turned do |
st Battalion, The Sherwood Foresters (The | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment), British Army du |
e, and from Nuthall Temple which stood in | Nottinghamshire and was one of only four houses built in |
He was a Deputy Lieutenant of | Nottinghamshire, and High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire. |
th Battalion, The Sherwood Foresters (The | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment), British Army du |
nt colonel in the Sherwood Foresters (The | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment), British Army, C |
He was also vicar of North Wheatley, | Nottinghamshire, and chaplain to Francis, lord Middleton. |
8 in Lincolnshire, three in Essex, two in | Nottinghamshire, and one in Hampshire. |
ount Ossington, he was born at Ossington, | Nottinghamshire, and educated at Eton and Christ Church, |
to exploit the coal seams around northern | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, the rail transport of whi |
Ward was born in Eastwood, | Nottinghamshire and played as a youth for the village tea |
k Avenue Cricket Ground, Bradford in 1881 | Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire v Rest of England in 1883. |
There were also properties in Calverton, | Nottinghamshire and Tibshelf, Derbyshire. |
arm bowler who was mainly associated with | Nottinghamshire and Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), he mad |
1/5th Battalion, The Sherwood Foresters ( | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment) |
81, however, a players' strike devastated | Nottinghamshire and Flowers, seen as a player with less r |
He had a 15 year career with | Nottinghamshire and captained them in 1966 and 1967. |
to handle the amount of coal coming from | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. |
th Battalion, The Sherwood Foresters (The | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment), British Army du |
d (1604-1669), who was born at Darlton in | Nottinghamshire and became a wealthy shipper in Hull. |
th Battalion, The Sherwood Foresters (The | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment), British Army du |
shire County Cricket Club against Surrey, | Nottinghamshire and Lancashire. |
Martin was born at Selston, | Nottinghamshire and played his youth football with Sutton |
ngham, another third from the surrounding | Nottinghamshire and a third from South East Derbyshire an |
(the Fosse Way) between Newark-on-Trent, | Nottinghamshire and Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. |
a of Leicestershire, plus some coverts in | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, stretching from just sout |
64), Cambridgeshire and Yorkshire (1864), | Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire (1872), United North of Eng |
n borough of Doncaster on the border with | Nottinghamshire, and is situated between Bircotes and Mis |
h in France, the body was brought back to | Nottinghamshire and interred in Harworth's cemetery. |
e occasions for Combined Services against | Nottinghamshire and Northamptonshire as well as a touring |
General of the counties of Lincolnshire, | Nottinghamshire, and Rutland. |
He was born in Shelton, | Nottinghamshire, and educated at Bedford Modern School an |
th Battalion, The Sherwood Foresters (The | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment), British Army, c |
all came for Oxford and were 151 against | Nottinghamshire and 118 against Free Foresters in 1929 an |
enturies, hitting an unbeaten 102 against | Nottinghamshire, and when county cricket resumed in 1946, |
son (21 May 1833 - 4 November 1901) was a | Nottinghamshire and All-England Eleven cricketer who was |
1 when he moved to Retford Oaks School in | Nottinghamshire and was succeeded by Patrick Atkinson. |
leven, and in 1883 for "The Rest" against | Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire. |
He was born in Langar, | Nottinghamshire and educated at Dulwich College and Queen |
tle owned mineral rights in much of North | Nottinghamshire and the original shaft was sunk in 1861. |
at 16.5 with a top score of 46 against a | Nottinghamshire and Lancashire combined side. |
er between the administrative counties of | Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire to the west and east res |
Hardstaff was born in Kirkby-in-Ashfield, | Nottinghamshire and is the third member in successive gen |
Tye was born in Bulwell, | Nottinghamshire and became a blacksmith. |
ter of Sir Henry Willoughby, of Wollaton, | Nottinghamshire and had two sons Thomas Arundell, 1st Bar |
the Brunts Business Centre in Mansfield, | Nottinghamshire and has a transmitter on Fishponds Hill b |
m in the 1989 Benson & Hedges Cup against | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. |
a best of 9 for 37 while he took 180 for | Nottinghamshire and 50, at just 8.12 for England XIs. |
lf centuries in all, including 89 against | Nottinghamshire and 51 against Middlesex, and took eleven |
rkshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and | Nottinghamshire, and the emphasis of the manuscript on ru |
hester and instigate smaller uprisings in | Nottinghamshire and Cheshire. |
ember of Parliament (MP) for Mansfield in | Nottinghamshire, and held the seat until his death in 194 |
Foot to form the The Sherwood Foresters ( | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment) . |
n two pre-war first-class matches against | Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire, both matches coming i |
ton Hall, Yorkshire, Mansfield Woodhouse, | Nottinghamshire and Hassop Hall, Derbyshire. |
Thomas Sacheverell of Kirkby-in-Ashfield, | Nottinghamshire, and his brother was to become Sir John C |
tershire, parts of Lincolnshire, southern | Nottinghamshire and Rutland) edition, based in Nottingham |
ston on the border between Derbyshire and | Nottinghamshire and was actually in Jacksdale. |
eper came two months later as Kent hosted | Nottinghamshire, and Beaumont claimed two stumpings and a |
He was a J.P. and Deputy Lieutenant for | Nottinghamshire and a major in the South Nottinghamshire |
bowler who played first-class cricket for | Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire between 1981 and 1985. |
on as a Liberal candidate at Bassetlaw in | Nottinghamshire and was defeated by the sitting Unionist |
He was a Deputy Lieutenant and J.P. for | Nottinghamshire and was High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire i |
Bunny, | Nottinghamshire, approach to Hall. |
e made guest appearances for clubs in the | Nottinghamshire area during the Second World War, but did |
rking families with jobs around the North | Nottinghamshire areas particularly as business parks had |
n 1837 described a match between Kent and | Nottinghamshire as for the County Championship. |
s father, Philip John Miles, but lived in | Nottinghamshire as Rector of Bingham. |
t point at Newtonwood Lane is actually in | Nottinghamshire as the Notts/Derbys boundary runs very cl |
ewtonwood Lane are natural high points in | Nottinghamshire as they are former colliery spoil tips. |
appeared five times in county cricket for | Nottinghamshire, as well as appearing for the Players in |
Born in 1873, he played 91 matches for | Nottinghamshire as a right-handed batsman and right arm m |
en v. Players at the Oval and he assisted | Nottinghamshire as an amateur until he turned professiona |
r, Basher, played first-class cricket for | Nottinghamshire as well as representing his native Kenya |
In 1902 the | Nottinghamshire association was made explicit, the name c |
class match for the county coming against | Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge. |
made his debut for Worcestershire against | Nottinghamshire at Dudley at the end of August 1928. |
n in a single first-class in 1925 against | Nottinghamshire at St. Helen's. |
Cartledge died in Stoke Bardolph, | Nottinghamshire at the age of 52. |
de his maiden first class century against | Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge on 13 May. |
was made in the second of these, against | Nottinghamshire at New Road. |
He made his top score, 184, against | Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge. |
His second, and final game, came against | Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge. |
wickets in four balls for Somerset versus | Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge in 1972 and became the fi |
sixth bowler used when he played against | Nottinghamshire at Bath and won the match by taking five |
His innings figures included 8/12 against | Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge and 8/32 against Kent. |
inutes with one six and 19 fours, against | Nottinghamshire at Bath in 1962, within two weeks of his |
Nottinghamshire at Cleethorpes | |
o amazing bowling feats - 9 for 32 versus | Nottinghamshire at Nottingham and 8 for 22 against Lancas |
意味 | 共起表現 |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |