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「Ouse」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

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h carries the Ipswich line over the River Great Ouse a mile south of Ely.
It lies on the eastern side of the River Ouse about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of York.
s a village and civil parish on the River Great Ouse about 3.5 miles (5.6 km) north-east of Buckingh
is located on the west side of the River Great Ouse, about 2 km from the river and from the town of
y of the Mole, Medway, Stour, Rother, Cuckmere, Ouse, Adur and Arun.
e Victoria Tunnel where the tidal nature of the Ouse allowed Wherries, the local barges, to be loade
r-cooled, using the water from the nearby River Ouse, and biomass fuel will be transferred to the si
of Kingsbrook are approximately the River Great Ouse and Priory Country Park to the north, Cambridge
bridgeshire, along the banks of the River Great Ouse, and have been designated a Site of Special Sci
cientific Interest (SSSI) adjacent to the River Ouse and approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Yor
The Ainsty, between the rivers Wharfe, Nidd and Ouse, and passes through the towns of Boston Spa, We
s in the City of York to the north of the River Ouse, and the Diocese of Leeds, covering the West Ri
kg) bomb and finished off by the destroyer HMS Ouse, and damaged four others.
Ouse and Derwent is marked 1.
wooded park, near the confluence of the rivers Ouse and Wharfe.
It is situated on the Ouse and 7 miles (11 km) north west of York.
itself, the Black Horse public house, the River Ouse and the nearby caravan park.
the A1123, west of the A10, north of the River Ouse, and east of the B1049 Twenty Pence Road.
Begwary Brook is adjacent to the River Great Ouse, and is managed as a nature reserve by the Wild
The land borders the River Ouse and is also home to birds such as mallards, mut
alls is the name of the confluence of the River Ouse and the River Trent which forms the Humber in Y
Ouse and Derwent was a wapentake of the historic Eas
Vale of York is drained southwards by the River Ouse and its tributaries, the Ure, the Nidd and the
the Humber, on the north bank, where the River Ouse and the River Trent meet.
e Stillingfleet (on the other side of the River Ouse) and Appleton Roebuck.
dge that spans a mill stream on the River Great Ouse and is, as the name suggests, built in an osten
It is on the River Ouse and is the official residence of the Archbishop
e in the improvement of navigation on the River Ouse and in the redevelopment of Newhaven Harbour.
Falls where the River Trent meets the Yorkshire Ouse and becomes the Humber.
The River Ouse, and therefore the canal, were not nationalised
ks of the River Ouzel, a tributary of the Great Ouse and on the other side of Brickhill Street from
arly in the 6th century worked their way up the Ouse and the Cam as far as Huntingdon.
er are more southerly contributors to the River Ouse and the most southerly Yorkshire tributary is t
village is on the north bank of the River Great Ouse, and is the site of an ancient bridge, linking
is situated on the east bank of the River Great Ouse, and is the site of Milton Ernest Hall, which w
asmania in towns such as Bothwell, Hamilton and Ouse, and until 1894 included much of the West Coast
It is situated just to the north of the River Ouse, approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) east of Goole.
the remains of an old windmill and on the River Ouse are the buildings of what used to be a working
nance-free steel was built over the River Great Ouse as a replacement for a previous long-standing 2
essively as a bridging point of the River Great Ouse, as a market town, and in the 18th and 19th cen
the Fen Rivers Way down the course of the Great Ouse as far as the Wash, or alternatively we can fol
and south of England) until it joins the River Ouse at Trent Falls to form the Humber Estuary, whic
The River Aire empties into the River Ouse at Airmyn, 'myn' being an old English word for
iver Derwent, eventually flowing into the River Ouse at Barmby on the Marsh.
is known to have taken place on the River Great Ouse at what is now Bedford.
rth, Bardwell, and Fakenham Magna to the Little Ouse at Euston and is still known as the Black Bourn
ucted by the Romans, and joined the River Great Ouse at Prickwillow until 1830.
he latter giving the Nar its name), joining the Ouse at King's Lynn.
certainly have provided an observatory over the Ouse basin, of defensive importance, and a beacon to
y, situated on the east bank of the River Great Ouse between Saint Neots and Huntingdon in west Camb
Ouse bridge on York bypass
The station was renamed Ouse Bridge in April 1854, and closed on 1 January 1
Ouse Bridge railway station was a railway station in
The problems with the Ouse Bridge pushed the opening of the whole section
nock Castle, Tempsford villagers and the Ivel & Ouse Countryide Project volunteers.
village, the course heads down the River Great Ouse, crosses over to the Kempston side heading towa
AM/MW (West Lynn, near the A47 and River Great Ouse), DAB and through the internet using BBC iPlaye
made national headlines in August 2006 when the Ouse District Hospital, originally established as a
Ouse District High School is a public school which c
Trent and all of its tributaries, and the River Ouse draining a major part of Yorkshire, England, an
The north-eastern boundary is formed by the Ouse Dyke, separating Netherfield from the parish of
om the Marshland bird hide, with a ship, on the Ouse, en route to Goole, in the background.
ons, one to prevent flood waters from the Great Ouse entering the lode, and the other to raise the w
n closed, it prevents floodwater from the River Ouse flowing up the Foss and flooding parts of York.
Its northern boundary is the Little Ouse forming the border with Norfolk, and the River
The River Ouse forms the border of the parish with the Harroga
essary, to control the level of the River Great Ouse from Earith southwards, with the excess water f
ory of the market town of St Neots on the River Ouse, from prehistoric times onwards.
cecourse between the railway line and the River Ouse from the late 1920s to the early 1940s
ome way to explaining how the little tributary ' Ouse Gill Beck' which enters at Linton-on-Ouse usurp
Both the River Waveney and the River Little Ouse have their sources at Redgrave Fen.
The work carried out by the Little Ouse Headwaters Project has helped to reverse these
The Little Ouse Headwaters Project (LOHP) was set up in 2002 by
bleak location on the banks of the River Great Ouse, however there is no known record for this.
Eaton Socon Castle stood beside the River Ouse in the village of Eaton Socon, which was origin
sed 'Act for building a Bridge across the River Ouse, in the City of York .. and for widening, alter
e cut-off or by-pass channel of the River Great Ouse in the Fens of Cambridgeshire, England.
il, Virginia Woolf drowned herself in the River Ouse in 1941.
South Bank is an area to the south of the River Ouse in York.
around Rockland All Saints and joins the Little Ouse in Thetford.
The River Nidd is a tributary of the River Ouse in the English county of North Yorkshire.
Tributaries entering the Great Ouse in the town are the River Kym, Hen Brook, Duloe
village and civil parish beside the River Great Ouse in the Aylesbury Vale district of Buckinghamshi
Over is a large village near the River Great Ouse in the English county of Cambridgeshire, just e
Modern Ely cathedral with the river Great Ouse in the foreground; though most of the Fenland w
e flood barrier then onto the bank of the River Ouse into York to meet the Foss Walk at the footbrid
The River Great Ouse is on the left.
The Ouse is the name given to the river after its conflu
Ouse is a small town in the Central Highlands Counci
The River Ouse lies to the east.
s of the East Suffolk and Norfolk, Essex, Great Ouse, Lincolnshire and Welland and Nene River Author
-acre (0.80 km2) reservoir that feeds the River Ouse located in West Sussex, England 5 miles (8 km)
It joins the Great Ouse near Tempsford.
Swans nesting beside the Great Ouse near St Neots
The sword was found in the River Ouse near Cawood in North Yorkshire in the late 19th
ch means 'camp on the Tove') before meeting the Ouse near Milton Keynes.
The Bridge over the River Great Ouse, north-east of the village
It lies 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of the River Ouse, not far from where it flows into the River Tre
t of Hull, and as the strong point on the River Ouse of immense strategic importance in the movement
hetford Forest on a meander of the River Little Ouse on the Norfolk-Suffolk border.
ted to the south of Lewes and west of the River Ouse on a flood plain, and contains many invertebrat
The area is on the southern bank of the Ouse, opposite the village of Blacktoft.
as situated on the west bank of the River Great Ouse, opposite the town of King's Lynn, and comprise
ecomes navigable, changes its name to the River Ouse, passes through York, becomes the Humber estuar
d Seaford (separated from Newhaven by the River Ouse, population 22,000).
e first bridge here there was a ford across the Ouse, probably dating back several thousand years.
Tributaries of the River Ouse provided some assistance in the building of now
Drax Ouse Renewable Energy Plant is one of the three prop
The Drax Ouse Renewable Energy Plant is predicted to result i
A site of the Drax Ouse Renewable Energy Plant adjacent to the current
positions overlooking the rivers Arun, Adur and Ouse respectively, while those at Chichester, Hastin
These comprise River Glen, Great Ouse, River Nene, and River Welland.
dle and is one of the tributaries of the Little Ouse river which eventually joins the Great Ouse and
ks needed for its construction travelled up the Ouse River (via Newhaven and Lewes) from Holland.
Thetford, an important crossing of the Little Ouse River, draws its name from the Anglo-Saxon Theo
a 200-acre (0.81 km2) Country park on the Great Ouse River, located near the village of Emberton, ne
The River Great Ouse runs alongside.
e mooring points in the lock basin on the River Ouse side with overnight mooring on the River Foss p
rls' boarding school), to the east of the River Ouse, some 4 miles (6 km) northeast of Buckingham.
Ouse: source near Lower Beeding; mouth at Newhaven
It lies on the south bank of the River Great Ouse, south of the larger town of Huntingdon, and on
lley is still accessible via a WWII entrance on Ouse Street.
The village is to the west of the River Ouse, Sussex and has a church dedicated to Saint Pet
The most northerly of the rivers in the Ouse system is the Swale, which drains Swaledale bef
of the School, closer to the banks of the River Ouse than the senior school which runs along the mai
spring that is the official source of the River Ouse that eventually exits into the sea at Newhaven.
ave for the extreme west beyond the River Great Ouse that is part of the diocese of Ely.
tween two diversion channels of the River Great Ouse: the Old Bedford River and the New Bedford Rive
Before bridges spanned the Ouse, the Stock Ferry was the usual way of crossing.
At its junction with the Great Ouse, the channel is crossed by the A10 road, which
Wells to Uckfield, and thence follows the River Ouse to its mouth at Newhaven, bypassing Lewes by me
rom the Midland quarries shipped down the River Ouse to Bedford and from there conveyed by horse and
Looking north across the River Ouse to Newton-on-Ouse
There are several bridges across the Great Ouse to Huntingdon, but until 1975 Old Bridge, Hunti
t is situated along the south bank of the River Ouse to the east of the town of Goole, covering an a
empston North are approximately the River Great Ouse to the north west, with Kempston High Steet and
rs Way, are the River Cam and shortly the Great Ouse to just below the historic city of Ely, with it
ships and they sailed together along the River Ouse towards the city of York.
iver Wharfe, which drains Wharfedale, joins the Ouse upstream of Cawood.
wers in Sussex, all of which are located in the Ouse Valley and all three built in the first half of
The Sussex Ouse Valley Way is a 42-mile long-distance footpath
A small section of the Ouse Valley Way is used on the Pathfinder March.
For the path in the East of England, see Ouse Valley Way.
The Ouse Valley Way is a 150-mile footpath in England, f
The Bedfordshire Reunion Brass Band play at Ouse Valley Sounds at breaks in the contest, such as
ies on the River Til which feeds into the Great Ouse valley and is about 70m above sea level.
Campaign group Defenders of the Ouse Valley and Estuary claimed that more than 11,00
St John's Church is one of three in the Ouse Valley with a round Norman tower, the others be
essitated the long tunnel near Balcombe and the Ouse Valley Viaduct.
The parish of Tarring Neville lies within the Ouse Valley and Ringmer ward of Lewes District Counc
Built in 1841, the Ouse Valley Viaduct (also called Balcombe Viaduct) o
65 metres above mean sea level, is close to the Ouse Valley and its flood plain.
rnment, for which Tarring Neville is within the Ouse Valley East division, with responsibility for E
nt, for which Falmer is within the Newhaven and Ouse Valley West division, with responsibility for E
etween 65 metres and 75 metres, overlooking the Ouse Valley.
he line, and was built in 1838 across the River Ouse valley.
Lewes Brooks is where the Falmer-Glynde and the Ouse valleys meet.
The Great Ouse was then diverted, and its old course occupied
The Ouse was navigable for small boats from Lewes up to
It has been suggested that the ' Ouse' was once all known as the 'Ure', but there see
Second World War the course of the River Little Ouse was over-deepened which led to the drying-out o
The Ouse Washes are an area in the Fens of Cambridgeshir
RSPB Ouse Washes is a nature reserve, managed by the Roya
tion and RSPB Welches Dam nature reserve on the Ouse Washes.
wards to Goole, where water levels in the River Ouse were between 5 and 10 feet (1.5 and 3.0 m) lowe
n 1982 the two York parishes south of the River Ouse were ceded to the Diocese of Middlesbrough to u
he banks of the Ouzel, a tributary of the Great Ouse, where there a disused balancing lake has becom
he parish's northern border is the River Little Ouse, which marks the boundary between Norfolk and S
its wildlife reservations that border the River Ouse which flows along its western border.
It is just north of the River Great Ouse, which forms the boundary with Buckinghamshire,
for a large area on the west bank of the Great Ouse, while at Great Paxton on the east bank, anothe
icklegate lies on the Western side of the River Ouse, Yorkshire, and holds the southern entrance int
                                                                                                    


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