「PUPIL」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)3ページ目
該当件数 : 1126件
As | pupil numbers grew, other houses were built alongsid |
ich was accompanied by significant increase in | pupil numbers and, from 1974, facilitated the school |
Pupil numbers fluctuate between 40 and 70 and the he | |
The rise in | pupil numbers in the senior school, however, was not |
a total of 140 staff and over 2,000 pupils - ( | pupil numbers as of 2004 in brackets) |
Because of falling | pupil numbers he was laid off in 1870. |
A new school room allowed | pupil numbers to rise to nearly 500 by 1871. |
Cranbourne has had a drop in | pupil numbers from 1250 in September 2004 to 830 in |
Pupil numbers swelled during the war years as evacue | |
The move has been triggered by a fall in | pupil numbers in both schools in recent years, and b |
in academic results, financial management and | pupil numbers compared with the previous time the sc |
gle, those in the house became dormitories and | pupil numbers rose. |
s) was closed in July 1991 due to a decline in | pupil numbers, and taken over by Walsall College (WA |
She attributed the decision to falling | pupil numbers, a young teaching force giving rise to |
f pupils and staff and a continued increase in | pupil numbers, rising to 547 in 1956 (102 of these i |
form option, having no plans despite the large | pupil numbers, to teach the International Baccalaure |
Falling | pupil numbers, and the opening of the new Herbert Sh |
dmore Primary School closed in 2006 due to low | pupil numbers. |
n is the largest school in Croydon in terms of | pupil numbers. |
ed school, closing in July 2008 due to falling | pupil numbers. |
e lowest category (Grade 4), and saw a drop in | pupil numbers. |
until July 1992 when it closed due to falling | pupil numbers. |
It closed in August 2011 due to | pupil numbers. |
g extended into the church to cope with rising | pupil numbers. |
ue for closure in the mid-1990s due to falling | pupil numbers; however, in 2002 the school was rated |
A former | pupil of the school, David Lewis, was the first Prin |
cklandt van Montfoort (who he knew as a fellow | pupil of Frans Floris), he is known as the founder o |
According to Karel van Mander, he was a | pupil of Frans Floris in Antwerp, who later returned |
He was a | pupil of the painters Ottavio Amigoni and Angelo Eve |
In 1820 he came to London, and became a | pupil of John Scott, the celebrated engraver of anim |
Afterwards he became a | pupil of George Scharf, and then went to Paris, wher |
He was born in Genoa, son and | pupil of the painter Giuseppe Badaracco. |
He is a former | pupil of Allan Glen's school and an alumnus of Glasg |
He was born in Valencia, where he became a | pupil of Francisco Ribalta. |
He was born in Genoa, the brother and | pupil of Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione, and he pain |
ks on Sandro Botticelli and that Baldini was a | pupil of Maso Finiguerra. |
A | pupil of Michael Carvin and Ed Thigpen, he has been |
Natty Dominique was a | pupil of the legendary Manuel Perez, moving to Chica |
composition and musicology in Vienna and was a | pupil of Franz Schreker and Franz Schmidt. |
lphe Hennebains (1862-1914), who was himself a | pupil of Paul Taffanel. |
born and active in Cortona, although he was a | pupil of Pietro da Cortona in Rome. |
He was first a | pupil of Giovanni Baroni, his relative, and then of |
the Vienna Academy, and later became a private | pupil of Professor Trenkwald. |
Varus who was consul in 2 AD can hardly be the | pupil of Servius; and it is conjectured that he may |
onstanz for further study with Hans Buchner (a | pupil of Paul Hofhaimer). |
A famous | pupil of his in Moltsh was Rabbi Yechezkel Sarna who |
unn was born in Neston, Cheshire, and a former | pupil of Sedbergh School and Mostyn House. |
He also studied with Maria Curcio who was a | pupil of Artur Schnabel. |
He was a | pupil of Jan Van Beers at the Normaalschool in Lier, |
nside a question - Works of Henriette Lannes - | Pupil of G. I. Gurdjieff Paul H. Crompton Ltd, Londo |
He is a former | pupil of Weston High School in Vredenburg South Afri |
He was sent to Venice when young, and became a | pupil of the younger Palma il Giovane. |
While there he was also a | pupil of legendary Harlem printmaker Robert Blackbur |
ived her first dancing training under a former | pupil of Enrico Cecchetti. |
, in Vienna from 1886 onwards, then became the | pupil of Edmund Hellmer at the Vienna Academy. |
He afterwards became a | pupil of Reni, in whose studio he learned wood-engra |
A | pupil of North Kesteven School in North Hykeham, Ada |
nomist Sir Alexander Cairncross, also a former | pupil of Hamilton Academy. |
O'Bryan was taught by Arthur Friedheim, a | pupil of Franz Liszt. |
for the design which was won by Edward Kemp, a | pupil of Paxton's and Curator of Birkenhead Park. |
on of R. Joseph, author of Gib'ot 'Olam, and a | pupil of R. Simon Spira of Prague, who gave him in m |
He was the | pupil of his father, the Venetian painter and later |
rray) from 1938-1941 (preceding another former | pupil of the Hamilton Academy, Robert Gibson, Lord G |
He was a | pupil of Bauzin, and became miniature painter to the |
School under the charge of Heraclas, the first | pupil of Origen, who had long been his assistant. |
At Oxford as a | pupil of William Buckland he became deeply intereste |
She became a | pupil of Magda Tagliaferro at the Conservatoire de P |
He was a | pupil of John Stanley at St. Paul's Cathedral. |
Levenson became a | pupil of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, before becoming a |
oke)) was a nineteenth century architect and a | pupil of George Gilbert Scott. |
He was the | pupil of Palma il Giovane, and painted several altar |
He was of noble birth, a relation and | pupil of Adalward, Bishop of Verden, and became cano |
He was the | pupil of Hendrik Mommers who went on to paint clever |
ighteen he went to Munich, where he became the | pupil of Orlando Lasso. |
According to Houbraken he was a | pupil of his uncle, Jacob Gerritsz Cuyp, who taught |
He was a | pupil of Bernardo Strozzi and accompanied Giovanni B |
oire de Paris in France in 1958 where he was a | pupil of Marcel Mule. |
He was a | pupil of Heinrich Schenker in Vienna from October 19 |
He was a | pupil of either the painter Giovanni Bellini or Vitt |
ved to Paris, France where Walter Gay became a | pupil of Leon Bonnat. |
He was a | pupil of the Talmudist Rabbi Aryeh Leib ben Asher Gu |
One smith in the family was a direct | pupil of Kaneuji, who founded the Shizu school. |
late 4th and early 3rd centuries BC and was a | pupil of Theophrastus . |
er training college in Borna, then he became a | pupil of Franz Liszt and later established himself a |
orn 17 May 1961) is an Indian sarod player and | pupil of Bahadur Khan. |
stor, one Jean Vuillaume, who was supposedly a | pupil of Stradivari, but this remains a legend, and |
organist of St. Paul's Cathedral and one time | pupil of Mozart. |
He subsequently became a | pupil of a Mr. Frampton, and showed great aptitude f |
ing conserved and the name was thought up by a | pupil of the school |
He was a | pupil of his father Alonso de Mena as well as of Alo |
sity of Salzburg from 1942-1943 where he was a | pupil of Clemens Krauss. |
Famed pianist Vladimir Horowitz was also a | pupil of Felix Blumenfeld, although Barere was Blume |
He was the son and | pupil of Antonio Semini, and was influenced by Perin |
enice with the studio of Titian, then became a | pupil of Giovanni Battista Moroni in Bergamo. |
Baptiste Bouchardon (1698-1762), he became the | pupil of Guillaume Coustou and gained the prix de Ro |
He was a | pupil of Agostino Tassi and a native of Rome. |
He began his medical education as a | pupil of Kinder Wood in Manchester (where he used to |
A one-time | pupil of Sir Anthony Caro, Hide is best known for up |
Johann Martin Augustin Scholz (1794-1852), a | pupil of Johann Leonhard Hug (1765-1846), professor |
ied at the University of Paris, where he was a | pupil of Jean Fernel (1497-1558). |
He later became a | pupil of Henryk Szeryng, and emigrated with his firs |
Sir Alexander Gibb was a | pupil of Brunel and Wolfe-Barry in 1895. |
was Kempe's partner and Martin Travers was the | pupil of Comper. |
He was a | pupil of the Campi. |
He was a | pupil of Filippuzzi in his native city, and of Abbat |
He was a | pupil of Giuseppe Bezzuoli. |
Moffatt was the son of a small builder and | pupil of James Edmeston. |
He was a | pupil of Galeazzo Campi. |
nephew of the director ("parnas") Kalonymus, a | pupil of R. Eliezer of Metz, and a colleague of Elie |
He was a | pupil of Joseph Caro. |
He was a | pupil of Ben Peach. |
Georg Joseph Vogler becomes a | pupil of Giovanni Battista Martini at Bologna. |
as a painter and tapestry designer, probably a | pupil of Jan Mabuse. |
ette: This Fundamental Quest: The Journey of a | Pupil of G. I. Gurdjieff Far West Institute, San Fra |
Gopi, together with Sivaraman, a | pupil of Padma Shri Vazhenkada Kunchu Nair, soon mad |
He was a | pupil of Jeremias Meyer. |
He was a | pupil of Juan Valdes Leal, who studied in the Academ |
He was a | pupil of Girodet. |
e studied classical archaeology in Vienna as a | pupil of Otto Benndorf (1838-1907). |
1590-1610) was a | pupil of Isaac Luria, and devoted himself at the dea |
He became a | pupil of George Lynskey in Liverpool then joined his |
He was the nephew and | pupil of Giovanni Battista Trotti, He painted for th |
604, he spoke with him about his training as a | pupil of Frans Floris in his workshop in Antwerp. |
He was a | pupil of Francisco Comontes. |
He was a | pupil of Francesco Boccaccino, who emerged from the |
ubjects - often from Shakespeare - who was the | pupil of H. P. Briggs. |
d with Johann Christian Kittel (1732-1809), (a | pupil of Johann Sebastian Bach), and eventually beca |
A | pupil of Galt's; in desperate case |
Dewey, a former | pupil of Madras College St Andrews, first made his n |
ano and nephews Mauro, Democrito (who became a | pupil of Antonio Canova), and niece Clementina. |
He was a | pupil of Luciano Borzone. |
Aspen Music Festival and School where he was a | pupil of Darius Milhaud. |
A | pupil of Henry Fuseli, he went to Rome in 1784, and |
radition he joined Middle Temple, and became a | pupil of John Jenour, at the time the second Prothon |
He was a | pupil of an obscure portrait painter named Sanders, |
He was a | pupil of Vasugupta. |
He was a | pupil of minimum wage proponent, John A. Ryan. |
, Berlin and in Leipzig, in the last city as a | pupil of Arthur Nikisch. |
He was the | pupil of Francisco Ribalta, and painted devotional p |
Though some said he was the | pupil of Bernard Schendel, they were the same age an |
Paul became a | pupil of Saint Illtud at Llantwit Major and on Calde |
but subsequently returned to music to become a | pupil of the composer Johann Adam Hiller, under whos |
Filippo became a | pupil of Guido Reni. |
He was a | pupil of Richard Wilson and was best-known in his li |
He was a | pupil of Luca Signorelli, and aided Giulio Romano at |
instruction, and one elder brother, who was a | pupil of Goovaert's. |
iversity, Lancashire, in 2007, and is a former | pupil of Sledmere Primary School in Dudley and St Mi |
He was the | pupil of Alessandro Tiarini. |
A | pupil of Henri Estienne, the Hellenist, at an early |
He was a | pupil of Alessandro Allori. |
He was a | pupil of Savigny. |
(Autobiography), Wiesbaden 1887, Otto Becker, | pupil of Arlt, completed his autobiography |
s, the first American-born architect, the only | pupil of Thomas Jefferson; Mills was also the archit |
He was the | pupil of Juan Conchillos. |
Another | pupil of Coach Bailey, Defensive End Willy VanDestee |
r studied at the Stockholm Conservatory as the | pupil of Johan Lindegren. |
He was a | pupil of William Horsley from 1829, and entered the |
ll star with the Down County team, is a former | pupil of the school. |
in Van Nuys, California and became the pet and | pupil of animal trainer Frank Weatherwax. |
He was a | pupil of the first, and in 1838 followed him to Muni |
He was born in Bologna, and was first a | pupil of Giovanni Paderna, but after Paderna's death |
He was a | pupil of Cosimo Tura. |
tory of Music from 1936 to 1940 where he was a | pupil of Herbert A. Fricker (conducting), Albert Pro |
He was a | pupil of the painter Domenico Passignano and Guido R |
He was a | pupil of Alessandro Bonvicino. |
aided by his wife, Ernesta, who was likewise a | pupil of Giuseppe Longhi. |
m his father from the age of five, he became a | pupil of Albert Sammons (and Ken Piper) when he was |
He was a | pupil of E.D. Palmer, New York, and of the schools o |
He was a | pupil of Francesco Albani. |
He is said to have been a | pupil of Lucian of Antioch, but it is unclear to wha |
He was a | pupil of Guercino. |
It then flows through the | pupil of the iris into the anterior chamber (bounded |
n illness in her family, Ms Messiter, a former | pupil of Woodstock, stepped in to watch over the sch |
He was a | pupil of Johanan (d. |
Although not a | pupil of Giulio Romano, his style closely imitated t |
He was a | pupil of William Croft and assisted William Boyce in |
is mother-herself a concert pianist and former | pupil of Theodor Leschetizky-died of tuberculosis. |
According to the RKD he was registered as a | pupil of Jan Davidsz de Heem in 1641 and in 1645 he |
She was a | pupil of Carl Loewe. |
Troili was a | pupil of Roger Joseph Boscovich at the Collegio Roma |
He was a | pupil of Giulio Romano. |
He was a | pupil of Hans Keller. |
understand for years, I saw thy face, and the | pupil of the eye of truth became clear. |
- 1929, Leningrad) was a suprematist artist, a | pupil of Kazimir Malevich and a founding member of t |
Ashton was born in London, and became a | pupil of Sir Robert Smirke. |
Her first teacher was Karl Niedermeyer, a | pupil of Hugo Becker, with whom she studied until ag |
Hiranyanabha - He was | pupil of Sage Jaimini and is considered to be a Sage |
He was born in Judea, probably a | pupil of R. Ishmael, and certainly a contemporary an |
says in the Historia Brittonum that he was the | pupil of Elfodd, describes him as a most holy bishop |
Eric Berne, who was a | pupil of Federn's, made extensive use of the term mo |
It is not impossible that he was a | pupil of Jacob b. |
air had been endowed in 1907 by another former | pupil of Hamilton Academy, James Stedman Dixon. |
He was born in Ancona, and became a | pupil of Simone Cantarini. |
A | pupil of John Mair, he also studied and taught at th |
the Royal Conservatory of Music, Brussels as a | pupil of Arthur Grumiaux. |
ncucci (1583-1653) was born at Lucca and was a | pupil of Guido Reni, and influenced by Sassoferrato. |
He was a former | pupil of Paget-Lewis at Homerton House School. |
He was a | pupil of Julien Le Roy in Paris in, perhaps, the 174 |
He was a | pupil of the painter Giovanni Battista Stefaneschi. |
es at Columbia University (MA 1969), and, as a | pupil of John Corigliano, at the Manhattan School of |
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