「SCOTS」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| Sadler chose to lodge Mary, Queen of | Scots, a decision which irritated Queen Elizabeth. |
| our documentary, Rory Bremner and the Fighting | Scots, about the history of Scots serving in the Bri |
| cut something of a dash, having abandoned his | Scots accent and displaying his proficiency at profa |
| st time he had heard Falstaff portrayed with a | Scots accent. |
| also of interest for Sean Connery fans, as the | Scots actor would reunite with director Terence Youn |
| p.131 - 133 by Robert MacKay: Quoting ' | Scots Acts of Parliament'. |
| The Presbyterians and the | Scots, after, Cornet George Joyce of Fairfax's horse |
| re produced in order to secure the help of the | Scots against the king. |
| ed an alliance with Mary of Guelders, Queen of | Scots against the Yorkists and the Scottish army pil |
| The | Scots agreed that the Glasgow Assembly had been 'ill |
| intended to provide an heir for the kingdom of | Scots, Alexander's marriage to the French Yolande re |
| f Spain, the Duke of Norfolk or Mary, Queen of | Scots, all of whom had a vested interest in overthro |
| Mary, Queen of | Scots allegedly stopped here briefly on her way to i |
| The | Scots, already unhappy with the War of the Spanish S |
| Danes were defeated and had to retire and the | Scots also retired, as they did so the Danes returne |
| e Elizabeth towards clemency for Mary Queen of | Scots, although Dalrymple disputes this. |
| R. Tait McKenzie`s | Scots American War Memorial (1927), Edinburgh, Scotl |
| R. Tait McKenzie`s | Scots American War Memorial (1927), Edinburgh, Scotl |
| Scottish reinforcements from Jedburgh gave the | Scots an advantage. |
| as home for approximately 1100 people, many of | Scots ancestry, and was connected to the nearby town |
| eston, Lanarkshire, near Glasgow, Scotland, of | Scots ancestry. |
| between the Royalists army (many of whom were | Scots) and the Parliamentarians during the Wars of t |
| s numerous descendants included Mary, Queen of | Scots, and King Henry IV of France. |
| ers, such as Captain Douglas Ford of the Royal | Scots, and Colonel Lanceray Arthur Newnham of the Mi |
| hing career and to research the origins of the | Scots and Celtic languages. |
| sest undoubted living relatives of English are | Scots and the Frisian languages. |
| the English crown's focus was on defeating the | Scots, and the castle was untroubled until the early |
| First to arrive was a community of | Scots and they had a Scottish altar dedicated to Sai |
| Gospatric joined the invading army of Danes, | Scots, and Englishmen under Edgar the Aetheling in t |
| of the commissioners who tried Mary, Queen of | Scots, and was one of the first to raise a troop of |
| p matches, and two matches against the touring | Scots and Pakistanis. |
| nue their excellent run of results against the | Scots and claim the championship again. |
| e humiliating Pacification of Berwick with the | Scots, and the scapegoat was Coke. |
| lizabeth I and replace her with Mary, Queen of | Scots, and he was executed, along with Sir Anthony B |
| an army north to assist the Percys against the | Scots and received the news at Burton-on-Trent. |
| The match ended in victory for the | Scots, and Christopherson never represented his coun |
| s Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell and Mary, Queen of | Scots, and was said to have infiuenced them by witch |
| nde (1263-1322) married Alexander III, King of | Scots, and later Arthur II, Duke of Brittany. |
| 7 May 1602) was the fifth child of James VI of | Scots and Anne of Denmark. |
| ssion of heresy, forbidding the immigration of | Scots, and vesting in the Crown the territory compri |
| Clayton Gillis Metcalf, | Scots and Their Kin, Volume I: Gilli(e)s, Padgett, A |
| , and which held out until the King joined the | Scots and ordered his supporters in Newark to surren |
| and Margad stayed for a while with the King of | Scots, and were well treated. |
| and the difficulties between the Presbyterian | Scots and the Anglicans, the Company needed someone |
| Many early settlers were | Scots and hence a Presbyterian Church preceded an An |
| building which accommodated both Mary Queen of | Scots and much of the Elizabethan nobility is of con |
| on is said to have seethed with hatred for the | Scots and also for Elizabeth's successor, James VI. |
| In 1314 it was destroyed by the | Scots and rebuilt 3 years later in 1317. |
| and made tributary" the Picts (along with the | Scots), and it is possible that Talorcan was subject |
| e of Breitenfeld in Leipzig in 1631, where the | Scots and Swedes took victory on both occasions. |
| provide a home in the New World for destitute | Scots and to deny the land to Hudson's Bay's commerc |
| a parliament of their own, with 51 per cent of | Scots and 48 per cent of Welsh people favouring the |
| He was hated by the | Scots and did not seem well liked even by the Englis |
| my controversies of the time of Mary, Queen of | Scots, and her son, James VI, Erskine was a conspicu |
| he ministered to a small band of Presbyterian | Scots and in 1786 established the first Presbyterian |
| The commissioners of Mary, Queen of | Scots and Francis II of France were the Earl of Mort |
| r as his lands were repeatedly attacked by the | Scots, and the Scottish-backed William Comyn, who wa |
| opacy, the project of religious union with the | Scots, and the Root and Branch Bill, and on the 1st |
| es II, who had become King of England, King of | Scots and King of Ireland at the death of his elder |
| rried on 23 November 1589 to James VI, King of | Scots, and later 1st of England |
| elebrations of his half-sister, Mary, Queen of | Scots and Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley. |
| proposed Treaty of Edinburgh to Mary, Queen of | Scots, and obtain her acquiescence in termination of |
| kmorton as a go-between between Mary, Queen of | Scots, and Mendoza, the ambassador of King Philip II |
| me in spite of the strenuous opposition of the | Scots, and especially of the Highlanders, who broke |
| have been founded in 1318 by Robert I, King of | Scots, and given to the canons of Inchaffray Abbey i |
| published a book about Scottish Naval History, | Scots and the Sea: A Nation's Lifeblood. |
| executions of Nigel Bruce and many other brave | Scots), and again in 1335 by David of Strathbogie. |
| rn sources, mostly simple melodies inspired by | Scots and Irish tunes. |
| ed two more times at first-class level for the | Scots and his other 10 games were for Warwickshire. |
| Relics of Mary, Queen of | Scots and the Jacobites. |
| Clabber passed into | Scots and Hiberno-English dialects meaning wet, gooe |
| 441 when due to the devastation wrought by the | Scots and the poor quality of the soil it was valued |
| ed and seems to have assisted the Stuarts Town | Scots and their Yamasee Indian allies. |
| began in the early 1860s with a small group of | Scots and American presbyterians who met in the neig |
| ly 1638 he urged the king to make war with the | Scots, and in 1640, when trouble was breaking out in |
| loosely based upon the lives of Mary, Queen of | Scots, and her son James I of England. |
| chanan-Smith Award, a statue of Mary, Queen of | Scots and a series of ballet figures. |
| Barrow, G. W. S., (editor) The | Scots and the North of England in The Kingdom of the |
| ales suffered an extremely heavy defeat to the | Scots, and Thomas was not selected to represent his |
| , in response to the threat of attack from the | Scots and the Border Reivers of both nationalities. |
| ther to Queen Elizabeth I or to Mary, Queen of | Scots, and the Catholic cause - are unclear. |
| I. Laud's new ideas and prayers had upset the | Scots, and when Charles was refused an army from Par |
| ing of the Loch shows four streams ("burns" in | Scots) and one exit point into the north sea. |
| reputation as a warrior, fighting against the | Scots and the French. |
| He adhered to Edward II both against | Scots and barons, and was regularly summoned to the |
| as said the house had relics of Mary, Queen of | Scots and Charles I, some other curiosities and some |
| e of Clitheroe was a battle between a force of | Scots and English knights and men at arms which took |
| going civil war that surrounded Mary, Queen of | Scots and the ever changing sides that opposed her a |
| onsisting of the centre companies of the Royal | Scots and the 41st under Major General Phineas Riall |
| ally the Presbyterian party, combined with the | Scots and the remaining Royalists, felt itself stron |
| ing's fleet and served in the wars against the | Scots and French. |
| The Act anent Peace and War ( | Scots anent means about or concerning) was an act of |
| Mary, Queen of | Scots, Antonia Fraser, 1971, Dell Publishing Company |
| demolished and replaced by one designed by the | Scots architects William Bucknall and Ninian Comper. |
| Arguing his belief that “over two thirds” of | Scots are actually Christians, and that the proporti |
| Of a family from the | Scots aristocracy, Grant, the youngest of eight brot |
| l of Melville (5 May 1660 - 6 June 1728) was a | Scots aristocrat, politician, and soldier. |
| Scots Armies of the English Civil War. | |
| However, the | Scots army which invaded England in their support wa |
| nglish returned to the Lothians, defeating the | Scots army at the battle of Pinkie, near Musselburgh |
| This time, a | Scots army defeated Charles' forces in the north, th |
| In 1039, Duncan led a large | Scots army south to besiege Durham, but the expediti |
| as a short-lived one: at Verneuil in 1424, the | Scots army was annihilated. |
| Brooke Boothby which was the same year as the | Scots arrived. |
| ccording to legend, his body was flayed by the | Scots as he had flayed Scotland, and William Wallace |
| A plain loaf, slices of which are known in | Scots as plain breid (pronounced ), is a traditional |
| A proponent of Ulster | Scots as a language, Lord Laird wants road signs in |
| ', 'Kerlin' or 'Kerl' was also used in lowland | Scots as a derogatory term for an old woman meaning |
| nds of Scotland resulted in the development of | Scots as the spoken language, a hybrid based on Angl |
| The UK government now accepts | Scots as a regional language and has recognised it a |
| eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the use of | Scots as a literary language was revived by several |
| He joined the Royal | Scots as an ensign on 24 May 1696. |
| The | Scots asserted their independence by initiating thei |
| f Scotland in July 1650, and the defeat of the | Scots at Dunbar in September, Scotland was occupied |
| nd Elizabeth were crowned as King and Queen of | Scots at Scone. |
| Mary married James II, King of | Scots at Holyrood Abbey in Edinburgh on (3 July 1449 |
| member of the English delegation that met the | Scots at Nottingham. |
| The | Scots at the Battle of Stirling Bridge (1297), for e |
| he bodies of English troops which defeated the | Scots at the Battle of Neville's Cross, close to Dur |
| hartered accountancy, when he joined the Royal | Scots at the outbreak of war. |
| On reaching the bridge the | Scots at once attacked, and a sharp fight ensued bet |
| e also commissioned a statue of Mary, Queen of | Scots, at 143-144 Fleet Street, London. |
| He assisted at the trial of Mary, Queen of | Scots, at Fotheringhay, in October the same year; an |
| felt after O'Neill's Ulster army defeated the | Scots at the battle of Benburb in June 1646 that the |
| a Commissioner for the trial of Mary, Queen of | Scots, at Fotheringhay, October 1586. |
| bert the Bruce, crowned Edward Balliol King of | Scots at Scone on September 24, 1332. |
| , went to Scotland and defeated Leslie and the | Scots at the Battle of Dunbar. |
| to a conclusion was the English defeat to the | Scots at the Battle of Stirling Bridge. |
| gh Sheriff of Yorkshire, he fought against the | Scots at the Battle of the Standard in 1138. |
| after Comyn's death Bruce was crowned King of | Scots at Scone. |
| sed the Trent on his way to negotiate with the | Scots at Southwell, prior to his eventual capture. |
| Dudley indeed had made it clear to the | Scots at the beginning of the affair, that he was no |
| Shannon's Way is a 1948 novel by | Scots author, A. J. Cronin. |
| Years, based on the novel of the same title by | Scots author, A. J. Cronin. |
| Called to the | Scots Bar in 1910 and fought in World War I as a Lie |
| The | Scots Baronial style is part of the Gothic Revival a |
| It is also the home field of the Highland Park | Scots baseball team. |
| tness center and an indoor swimming pool), the | Scots Baseball Field, the Kelley Indoor Baseball Com |
| a, officially peaking at 2.8 inches (71 mm) in | Scots Bay, Nova Scotia with an unofficially higher t |
| hared the same monarch since James VI, King of | Scots became King of England in 1603 following the d |
| bly took the step of aligning himself with the | Scots because of Murdac's desire to establish York's |
| or the man, whomever he may have been, and the | Scots believed her. |
| 1365 was cancelled and a new one set up to the | Scots benefit, due to the influence of the war with |
| ous at Selby on 11 April 1644, and joining the | Scots, besieged York, after which he was present at |
| and schemed on a stage that stretched from the | Scots border to the Mediterranean Sea. |
| He was a | Scots border chieftain in the BBC's 1968 colour cost |
| The Royal | Scots Borderers - Light Role (19 Light Brigade) - Dr |
| St Boswells ( | Scots: Bossels; Scottish Gaelic: Cill Bhoisil) is a |
| In 1808 George Frederick Stratton engaged the | Scots botanist and garden designer John Loudon, who |
| English included the sound /x/ as gh (compare | Scots bricht with English bright). |
| In 1796, he commanded the | Scots brigade (later 94th Foot) encamped at West Bar |
| Originally formed as the ' | Scots Brigade' in 1568, for service in the Netherlan |
| became a military chaplain (apparently to the | Scots brigade), and continued to officiate in that c |
| e 2nd Battalion, 1st Regiment (later The Royal | Scots), British Army during the Crimean War when the |
| Burnfoot ( | Scots: Burnfit) is a housing estate just east of the |
| s a commissioner that would try Mary, Queen of | Scots but is not subsequently mentioned as one of th |
| Somerset's army eventually defeated the | Scots, but the young Queen Mary was smuggled to Fran |
| gitimate daughter of William the Lion, King of | Scots by the daughter of Richard Avenel. |
| e eldest daughter of Robert the Bruce, King of | Scots by his first wife, Isabella of Mar, and the fo |
| When the latter was appointed as King of | Scots by King Edward I of England, William retained |
| a "top international scientific civil servant, | Scots by birth, living in Paris." |
| Paulet was appointed gaoler of Mary, Queen of | Scots, by Elizabeth in January 1585, replacing the m |
| de of people and many herds of cattle: and the | Scots called this the raid of Albidosorum, that is, |
| arlingford Lough (Irish: Loch Cairlinn, Ulster | Scots: Carlinford Loch) is a glacial fjord or sea in |
| It resulted in a catastrophic defeat for the | Scots caused by the use of naval artillery by the En |
| He belonged to the | Scots Charitable Society of Boston. |
| The | Scots Charitable Society (est.1657) of Boston, Massa |
| t ignorance of her existence displayed by some | Scots chroniclers. |
| News and Notes: | Scots' Church Fremantle, The West Australian, (Satur |
| He asks Spang, minister of the | Scots church at Campvere, to ‘keep correspondence wi |
| Rev. Douglas Robertson from | Scots' Church in Melbourne, who at the same meeting |
| Ridley was ordained in the | Scots Church by Lang in 1850, the following yesr he |
| a memorial plaque to be placed in St. Andrew's | Scots Church in Rose Bay. |
| New South Wales and assistant minister of the | Scots Church, Melbourne, in 1979. |
| On 7 August, at | Scots Church, Sydney, he married Sister May Isabel B |
| forgiving Servant on a stained glass window in | Scots' Church, Melbourne shows the initial forgiving |
| the first Australian born minister at Sydney's | Scots Church. |
| Scottish Court Service and form the basis for | Scots civil procedure.) |
| passenger ships to Australia, so she took 756 | Scots civilian passengers to South Australia and Vic |
| in London, The Liverpool Athenaeum, The Royal | Scots Club in Edinburgh, Western Club in Glasgow, Ph |
| Randwick and Coogee, but soon settled into the | Scots College in Sydney where he excelled in both mu |
| Blairs College in Kincardineshire, then at the | Scots College in Rome. |
| He also served as procurator of the Royal | Scots College in Madrid (now located in Salamanca). |
| The | Scots College operated in Bathurst until 1945 when i |
| He was ordained a priest in the | Scots College on 21 May 1656. |
| rn in Douglas in 1618, he took the oath at the | Scots College in Rome on 1 November 1641, and for th |
| tland, New South Wales, he was educated at The | Scots College in Sydney before moving to Evergreen i |
| Martin attended the | Scots College in Bellevue Hill from 1939-1946 before |
| He went to high school at The | Scots College and graduated with Bachelor of Medicin |
| He completed his studies at the Royal | Scots College then in Valladolid, Spain, and was ord |
| He left the | Scots College on 15 March 1646 for the mission in Sc |
| In 1942, The | Scots College in Sydney leased the property for the |
| Batman attended The | Scots College and Cranbrook School. |
| eing appointed spiritual director at the Royal | Scots College in Salamanca, Spain, in 1999. |
| Zhang has a son who studies at The | Scots College Sydney and a daughter who studies at K |
| mouth, Moray, in 1625, he took the oath in the | Scots College in Rome on 21 May 1651, and for the ne |
| He completed the foundation of the | Scots College in Paris, initiated by his predecessor |
| He entered the | Scots College in Rome on 30 September 1838, and took |
| One of these was the | Scots College at Douai, founded by its first Superio |
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