「Probably .」の共起表現一覧(1語右が「in」)
該当件数 : 152件
They are | probably in the wrong." |
And | probably in other languages as well. |
He died before 1298, | probably in 1295. |
steamer Aquilo, with Triton ( | probably) in background |
He married Mary Sawyer, | probably in 1814. |
Probably in the table of other statistics. | |
The epicenter was | probably in Alpine. |
He was educated for the dissenting ministry, | probably in London. |
Clements died at the age of 84, | probably in Yarmouth. |
He died unmarried, | probably in London, in December 1714. |
He remained in Palestine and died there, | probably in 1121. |
He was born | probably in 906 AH (1500 CE) |
A stone castle was built, | probably in the 13th century. |
Everard died on 12 October | probably in 1146. |
His best performance was | probably in Super Bowl XVIII. |
He took refuge first in Zurich then | probably in Bavaria. |
Sykes was born in 1725, | probably in New Castle, Delaware. |
The warming house was | probably in the south range. |
He was executed by the Gestapo, | probably in October 1943. |
Baker was married, | probably in Massachusetts, around 1821. |
Their greatest difference is | probably in their near infrared emissions. |
Henryk Friedman died | probably in a Nazi camp. |
The porches were | probably in the late 18th century. |
He was born | probably in Rouen, studied probably with Denis Gaultie |
The mistake is | probably in the A. Peace's article but if someone is s |
issioner "A" (Operations and Administration), | probably in 1968. |
curs in the southeastern deserts of Egypt and | probably in nearby Sudan. |
Basset was elected in 1241, | probably in December, and consecrated on 9 October 124 |
However, the word was | probably in use by at least 1513, before Tyndale's tra |
On Theodo's death ( | probably in 716), the division took full effect. |
dults have been found from March to December, | probably in several generations. |
Probably in the late 1940s, the residents of Bismarck | |
There remains to find the real figure, | probably in the realm of 11-12 KIA. |
The station was closed, | probably in 1956: see List of closed railway stations |
ger, also with two lights and tracery that is | probably in concrete. |
Snow storms were also | probably in mountainus Bhutan and Sikkim, but no repor |
The Soviets scrapped T-525, | probably in 1956, never having returned her to U.S. Na |
The Soviets scrapped T-522, | probably in 1956, never having returned her to U.S. cu |
Iulius Agricola ( | probably in AD 82, although the chronology is disputed |
Keenan was born in Ireland, | probably in the 1840s, and immigrated to the United St |
From there he emigrated to Great Britain | probably in late 1810s. |
rmy Apprentices School was established there ( | probably in both Uniacke AND Hildebrande barracks) in |
He died, | probably in the vicinity of Amsterdam, on 18 August 16 |
Abaqa died at Hamadan on 1 April 1282, | probably in a state of Delirium tremens. |
Sinnett married his wife Patience in 1870, | probably in the London area. |
He took monastic vows, | probably in St. Demetrius Monastery in today's Sremska |
The Westerne were an Anglo-Saxon tribe, | probably in western England. |
F will perform again Baltic Air Policing most | probably in three or four years. |
e and Hanley Swifts before joining Port Vale, | probably in 1907. |
He was made duke of Apulia, | probably in 1189, at his father's succession. |
McLemore was born on August 23, 1823, | probably in Simpson or Copiah County, Mississippi. |
He was born in Mainz, | probably in the beginning of the 15th century. |
th transept, a south transept was also added, | probably in the 16th century. |
This tram will be transferred to a museum, | probably in 2010. |
He was born about 1045, | probably in Milan in Northern Italy. |
It was captured by the Soviets in 1945 ( | probably in Manchuria) |
I'll think about how best to deal with this - | probably in a footnote.--DavidCane |
In 1187/1188 Valdemar was consecrated | probably in the Cathedral St. Petri. |
The Soviets scrapped T-597, | probably in 1956, never having returned her to U.S. Na |
nastasius IV and was crowned on the same day, | probably in Rome. |
was born in the Samokov eparchy of the time, | probably in the town of Bansko. |
Abbot and Bishop of Ros-mic-Truin (Ireland), | probably in the sixth century. |
Her most high-profile role was | probably in Dynasty as Sarah Curtis. |
carried out patrols at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, | probably in 1919. |
ancient temple was cut out of monolithic rock | probably in the 9th century. |
He was born in 1837 | probably in Quebec City and died in Westmount, Quebec |
o he was executed for "homosexual practices", | probably in Lyon in 1556. |
Between 1604 and 1610 he was in Italy, | probably in Rome. |
iah ben Obadiah was the ruler of the Khazars, | probably in the mid ninth century CE. |
largest such municipal facility in the UK and | probably in Europe . |
Ribaforada, Navarre; d. 1740, | probably in Madrid) was a Spanish soldier and colonial |
They were written by Aksapada Gautama, | probably in the second century BCE. |
The Soviets scrapped T-596, | probably in 1956, never having returned her to U.S. Na |
The Soviets scrapped T-595, | probably in 1956, never having returned her to U.S. cu |
The date of his death is unknown - but | probably in the 1660s. |
er he was in Ireland and in Spain and he died | probably in France in 1652. |
"People think | probably in our developed world that we can live witho |
A celebrated performer on the viol, was born ( | probably) in the parish of Christchurch, Newgate Stree |
s be attached to a people in northern Africa, | probably in the surrounding area of Egypt. |
He returned to the Central Flying School, | probably in late 1914 and was appointed Officer In-cha |
King Francis I died there, on 31 March 1547, | probably in the imposing medieval tower that bears his |
Baptist Aurelius, also a Protestant minister, | probably in London, where Abraham was born. |
ran, takes place somewhere in Indian jungles, | probably in southern India. |
Mamie Robinson was born May 26, 1883, | probably in Cincinnati, Ohio, although no records of h |
nobility, he lost the throne and was killed, | probably in Iske Qazan. |
by 1723mm, it was painted on a wooden panel, | probably in the first decade of the 17th century. |
n English Augustinian friar who was executed, | probably in December 1539; he was canonised in 1970. |
-Bishop of Ostia in the consistory celebrated | probably in December 1151. |
He was born | probably in the diocese of Beauvais and entered the or |
n use as a private motorboat in 1916 or 1917, | probably in the New York City area. |
a geographer and a vicarius of Roman Britain, | probably in the late 350s AD. |
The sarcophagus is broken ( | probably in antiquity), and the mummy was relocated to |
Probably in 1059, the elder Pandulf abdicated to the m | |
luence of Henry of Blois, and was consecrated | probably in March 1136. |
versity of Edinburgh, from which he graduated | probably in 1859. |
Helvis, married ( | probably in 1120, around and before 1122) Barisan of I |
Probably in the reign of Kulothunga Chola I, the forti | |
he ruled another year and eight months, dying | probably in 843. |
at Whitehaven in 1794, and some years later, | probably in 1810, moved to London. |
There the MB6890 was dubbed the "Peach", | probably in ironic reference to the popularity of the |
In 1835 he married ( | probably in Louisville, Kentucky) to Jane Sibley (1817 |
Giacomo Zanetti (c.1696-1735), born | probably in Lugano, was an Italian master builder and |
However, it is now thought that Adam was | probably in Persia before 1314, during the pontificate |
Edmund Catherick (born | probably in Lancashire about 1605; executed at York, 1 |
t he was buried on the sacred island of Iona, | probably in about the year 1402. |
us II created him cardinal-bishop of Tusculum | probably in March 1123 (or in December 1122). |
dhood was shaped by her mother's early death ( | probably in giving birth to Catherine) and her father' |
e matches before moving on to Guildford City, | probably in the autumn of 1945. |
o the mansion in the several following years, | probably in 1906. |
Olbera was | probably in the vicinity to convince Charquin and his |
Later that year, he was in the Mezzogiorno, | probably in the trail of the Emperor Lothair II. |
ng that Pertwee's final public appearance was | probably in a British TV commercial for a cellphone ne |
estern facade is flanked by two round towers, | probably in imitation of the Saint Sophia Cathedral in |
It is called by Ptolemy Psaphara (Psaphara) | probably in order to distinguish it from Antigonia in |
the railway's timetables at an unknown date, | probably in the early 1930s. |
various parts of the world by human commerce, | probably in timber. |
na, and joined the Union Army September 1863, | probably in Anderson. |
ioman, Pulau Aur, Sumatra, Java, Langkawi and | probably in Southern Thailand. |
somewhere between the 2nd and 5th Centuries, | probably in the 2nd Century, with the Hebrew dating to |
Prior to invention of shears - | probably in the Iron Age - the wool was plucked out by |
He served as praetor in Sicily, | probably in 96 BC, shortly after the Second Servile Wa |
Colliery, Siston, Bristol is unknown, but was | probably in the late 1790s or early 19th century. |
He was born | probably in Essex, England and arrived in Salem, Massa |
ne point it, too, was connected to the store; | probably in 1856 when Ludlum bought out Doll and becam |
inted acting Minister of Government Services, | probably in reflection of his previous work as a gover |
Yalden's best performance with the bat was | probably in September 1773 when he played for Surrey v |
Probably in order to apply more pressure on Sweden in | |
Born | probably in St. John's, Newfoundland in April 1740, he |
completed his college and philosophy studies, | probably in Canada. |
usion that they originated in the Hejaz, most | probably in the site of Qurayya. |
This was published, | probably in the 1930s, “with Christmas Greetings” from |
became vicar of Evesham, Worcestershire, and | probably in 1604 became rector of St. Matthew's Church |
r grains in the Becklin-Neugebauer Object and | probably in NGC 2264-IR as well. |
well as viola da gamba, lute and organ, most | probably in his native town. |
Three of these were used, | probably in the late 12th century, in the rebuilding o |
In December (Chinese calendar, | probably in 1123), the garrison of Nanjing surrendered |
pril 1279, and he was buried in York Minster, | probably in the choir. |
Hall was pulled down before 1847 (Copinger), | probably in the mid C17 when the Callum's (the Drury h |
Somananda lived in Kashmir, most | probably in Srinagar where most of the later philosoph |
It was | probably in this capacity, rather than as ˜Maister of |
somewhere between Stourbridge and Birmingham | probably in the Kings Norton area. |
ur de Saint-Pierre on the Saskatchewan River ( | probably in the Nipawin, Sask. |
William Tripp (born | probably in Bethel, Maine, November 29, 1817; died in |
vines for thousands of years, the origins are | probably in ancient times. |
l show evidence of landslips having occurred, | probably in early post-glacial times. |
d Skattmestere Gattun ("Treasurer's Street"), | probably in reference to Gabriel Bengtsson Oxenstierna |
he seven chapels of the parish of Kilmore was | probably in the grounds of Tobar Mhuire (Mary's Well). |
ethnogenesis of the contemporary Balkars and | probably in some scale of the Volga Tatars and Crimean |
t is formed mainly of vertical rift passages, | probably in the original joints in the limestone which |
elsen, of Snopes.com, says that the fetus was | probably in fact assembled from the head of a doll att |
and named him a Knight of the Garter in 1471, | probably in honor of his support during the Wars of th |
the West Virginia Public Service Commission, | probably in January 2008. |
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