「Seneca」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| ation, and following a dramatic interlude, the | Seneca agreed also. |
| d with at least five other people when a Piper | Seneca aircraft he was in crashed on a beach just sho |
| Seneca Allegany Casino and Hotel - This facility in S | |
| lakes, but the area around Canandaigua, Keuka, | Seneca, and Cayuga Lakes contain the vast majority of |
| ng the 26th District, then comprising Ontario, | Seneca, and Yates counties. |
| ponsible for St. Paul's, Pendleton; Ascension, | Seneca; and St. John's, Walhalla. |
| occaccio, Pope Nicholas V, Francesco Petrarca, | Seneca, and Socrates. |
| The schooners | Seneca and Simcoe were also taken into service. |
| The 26th District comprising Ontario, | Seneca, and Yates counties. |
| had introduced him to the works of Augustine, | Seneca, and Petrarch; Branca presumes that he had als |
| s had been advanced by writers such as Cicero, | Seneca, and the Cynics. |
| ads is a 1986 film starring Ralph Macchio, Joe | Seneca and Jami Gertz, inspired by the legend of blue |
| rge-scale shipping of Ponderosa Pine logs from | Seneca and the surrounding national forest began to t |
| ackawanna, as well as the entire towns of West | Seneca and Orchard Park. |
| On 24 November, she joined | Seneca and Pocahontas in taking possession of Tybee I |
| proved that Hughes's memory was saturated with | Seneca, and that the play may be resolved into a patc |
| cause whenever this particular box, located at | Seneca and Wells streets in Buffalo, New York was use |
| ndaries of the AVA include portions of Cayuga, | Seneca, and Tompkins counties. |
| f North Cayuga, South Cayuga, Oneida, Rainham, | Seneca and Walpole (excluding parts lying within the |
| (two seats) comprising Tioga, Steuben, Cayuga, | Seneca and Tompkins counties. |
| flooded by Lake Hartwell formed by damming the | Seneca and Tugaloo rivers, it is natural to refer thi |
| ttle Beard's Town, also known as Chenussio (in | Seneca) and "Genesee Castle", was a powerful Seneca t |
| her great thinkers of antiquity such as Plato, | Seneca, and Plutarch (who seems to have influenced Er |
| ncluding the Cayuga, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, | Seneca and Tuscarora tribes), and by Timothy Pickerin |
| USCGC | Seneca and the commissioned merchant steamer City of |
| In Kansas, the Mingo joined other | Seneca and Cayuga bands, and the tribes shared the Ne |
| n additional 8,000 workers in Lackawanna, West | Seneca, and Buffalo. |
| tablished a planing mill and railroad shops in | Seneca, and it became essentially a company town. |
| ere leading an army from Canada annihilate the | Seneca and eliminate them as competitors in the inter |
| deration including the Mohawk, Oneida, Cayuga, | Seneca, and Onondaga tribes. |
| of the townships of Walpole, Oneida, Rainham, | Seneca and North Cayuga, and the villages of Cayuga a |
| City of Clemson, the City of Anderson, City of | Seneca and the Towns of Central, Greenville and Pendl |
| rgency Relief Administration (TERA), headed by | Seneca anthropologist Arthur C. Parker. |
| French missionary, brought Catholicism to the | Seneca area 175 years before St. Patrick's Parish was |
| Civil disturbance operations at | Seneca Army Depot, New York, |
| lus, New York assigned the ICAO code KSSN, see | Seneca Army Airfield. |
| Captured by the | Seneca as a boy and assimilating with them, Girty kne |
| nt of the Southern at the time, to prefer over | Seneca as the main station for the area. |
| after the American Revolutionary War, when the | Seneca as British allies were forced to cede much lan |
| sil Nadir flew to France in a six-seater Piper | Seneca as he fled to Northern Cyprus. |
| litical influence waned, as younger men of the | Seneca assumed control. |
| mmigrant colonist who had been captured by the | Seneca at age 15 with her family, most of whom were k |
| Seneca Avenue is a station on the BMT Myrtle Avenue L | |
| ed northeast on DeKalb Avenue and southeast on | Seneca Avenue to the Myrtle Avenue Park in Ridgewood, |
| ted at the intersection of Palmetto Street and | Seneca Avenue in Ridgewood, Queens, it is served by t |
| t and northeast corners of Palmetto Street and | Seneca Avenue. |
| ne gunners ran to cover when the shells of the | Seneca began to fall so close to their mark that they |
| A bust of | Seneca behind the philosopher references his work, wh |
| hography described here is the one used by the | Seneca Bilingual Education Project. |
| The | Seneca bought back most of their reservation with the |
| He was the son of the Rev. and Mrs. | Seneca Breyfogel. |
| The tribe owns and operates the | Seneca Buffalo Creek Casino, located in Buffalo, New |
| The Main | Seneca Building, originally known as the Marine Trust |
| The West | Seneca Campus is the primary setting for Houghton's a |
| erintendent of Canal Repairs on the Cayuga and | Seneca Canal. |
| sed at Tompkinsville, Staten Island, New York, | Seneca carried out minesweeping and patrol duties for |
| adaseaga (also spelled Kanatasaka and known as | Seneca Castle), was a major village of the Seneca nat |
| nitially consisted of the Townships of Oneida, | Seneca, Cayuga North, Cayuga South, Rainham, Walpole, |
| ol of the Iroquois Confederacy (comprising the | Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk, and Tuscaro |
| r PA-28 Archer, Piper PA-28 Arrow, Piper PA-34 | Seneca, Cessna 172 and a Tiger Moth. |
| Chainbreaker (1760-1859), a | Seneca chief also known as Governor Blacksnake. |
| gwih ("Spear Hanging Down") (died 1806), was a | Seneca chief who participated in the American Revolut |
| He was born the son of a prominent | Seneca chief of the Turtle clan in western New York. |
| st ship (?) to transit the Canal was allegedly | Seneca Chief. |
| Little Beard was one of the | Seneca chiefs signing the Treaty of Canandaigua of 17 |
| Seneca cigarettes are a brand of additive free cigare | |
| and, performs with a jazz combo and teaches at | Seneca College in Toronto. |
| He was a lecturer at Ryerson and | Seneca College and the University of Toronto from 197 |
| from active play, Harbaruk became the coach of | Seneca College in Toronto. |
| After a one-year hiatus, she attended | Seneca College where she studied civil engineering an |
| He attended | Seneca College in Computer Programming and Analysis i |
| l's Co-educational College, McGill University, | Seneca College and the University of Toronto. |
| three-day outdoor music festival hosted at the | Seneca College campus in King City, Ontario, Canada. |
| ada in 1979 to study English and accounting at | Seneca College, pursuing music with the folk group La |
| Diploma in Aviation and Flight Technology from | Seneca College, Toronto, Ontario, in 1981. |
| usiness with her husband and is a professor at | Seneca College. |
| Seneca College's York campus is found to the south, a | |
| o seats) comprising Tioga, Steuben, Cayuga and | Seneca counties. |
| ct which included parts of Sandusky County and | Seneca Counties. |
| Surrogate of | Seneca County 1837-1843. |
| County clerk of | Seneca County 1819-1821. |
| and Huron County, the northeast corner of both | Seneca County and Crawford County and northern portio |
| February 1849, Blair married Sarah L. Ford, of | Seneca County New York. |
| He served as district attorney of | Seneca County in 1836 and 1837. |
| On Aug. 3 the women were transported to the | Seneca County Fairgrounds in Waterloo where a makeshi |
| He was a member from | Seneca County of the New York State Assembly in 1814- |
| He was a Republican member from | Seneca County of the New York State Assembly from 190 |
| They were taken by school bus to the | Seneca County Jail where they were arraigned. |
| In 1878, he was a member from | Seneca County of the New York State Assembly. |
| ke not), who had succeeded in having a town in | Seneca county christened "Waterloo," leaped to his fe |
| However, Gillmor long insisted that | Seneca County (home to both Old Fort and Tiffin) is h |
| neral election, Democrats placed high hopes on | Seneca County Commissioner Ben Nutter, but Damschrode |
| hased 320 acres from the Federal Government in | Seneca County, Ohio in 1821, and the family moved the |
| He served as clerk of | Seneca County, 1821 and 1822. |
| license in 1818 and began practicing in rural | Seneca County, New York. |
| He moved to Fostoria, | Seneca County, and engaged in the manufacture of unde |
| a historic Methodist church located at Lodi in | Seneca County, New York. |
| an unusual migration path, Rose moved north to | Seneca County, New York in 1803. |
| United Methodist church located at Waterloo in | Seneca County, New York. |
| born in 1831 in Waterloo, a village located in | Seneca County, New York. |
| , who settled in what is now the town of Lodi, | Seneca County. |
| estern and southern Lorain County, and eastern | Seneca County. |
| Other businesses sell | Seneca craft goods, groceries, and prepared food. |
| wig, and Toby Jones to be cast in the roles of | Seneca Crane, Caesar Fickerman, Cinna, President Snow |
| (23.74 km) of the creek has been set aside as | Seneca Creek State Park. |
| Seneca Creek lies within the Spruce Knob-Seneca Rocks | |
| Great | Seneca Creek begins in Damascus and flows south past |
| Little | Seneca Creek rises in the Clarksburg area, flows sout |
| he Middle River Neck Peninsula adjacent to the | Seneca Creek tributary of the Gunpowder River, and is |
| med in Burkittsville, but rather in Maryland's | Seneca Creek State Park, about 25 miles (40 km) away, |
| It continued up that Fork and up | Seneca Creek (passing Seneca Rocks) and crossed the c |
| Seneca Creek is a tributary of the North Fork South B | |
| Seneca Creek, looking upstream from Berryville Road | |
| created by the construction of a dam on Little | Seneca Creek. |
| In 1675 the | Seneca defeated the Andaste/Susquehannock to the sout |
| They were then taken to the South | Seneca Elementary School in Interlaken where they wer |
| In August 2010 the | Seneca Fair Trade association won an injunction allow |
| g on temperance issues, came upon Stanton on a | Seneca Falls street and Bloomer introduced Anthony to |
| A statue in | Seneca Falls marks the location where the two women w |
| After the | Seneca Falls Convention Martha Wright participated in |
| urch is a historic Methodist church located at | Seneca Falls in Seneca County, New York. |
| In 1871 he became Assistant Engineer of the | Seneca Falls and Sodus Bay Railroad, and afterwards w |
| He left | Seneca Falls in 1851 for Lockport, New York, where he |
| th was not a member of the select group at the | Seneca Falls Convention assembled to discuss the righ |
| r women's rights in America; the landmark 1848 | Seneca Falls Declaration was in large part the work o |
| This Digest places the events of the | Seneca Falls Convention within the larger context of |
| mously to the National Women's Hall of Fame in | Seneca Falls (village), New York. |
| With the exception of two terms at the | Seneca Falls Academy, he had no schooling other than |
| son residence still stands on Cayuga Street in | Seneca Falls, and is being developed into condominium |
| Born in | Seneca Falls, New York, Adler received a B.L. from Co |
| Seneca Falls, New York (A & K) | |
| In | Seneca Falls, Stanton continued his work in reform, j |
| Spiegelman was born in | Seneca Falls, New York. |
| He moved to | Seneca Falls, New York, in 1831. |
| s well as the National Women's Hall of Fame in | Seneca Falls, New York. |
| admitted to the bar and commenced practice at | Seneca Falls, New York. |
| husetts, Chamberlain moved with his parents to | Seneca Falls, New York, in 1807. |
| He died at | Seneca Falls, New York, October 5, 1878 and was inter |
| He resumed the practice of law at | Seneca Falls, New York. |
| on (July 21, 1846 - July 16, 1931) was born in | Seneca Falls, New York, the daughter of Eunice Newton |
| He was born in | Seneca Falls, New York and died in Harrow, England in |
| y Sanford (1850-1940) as an all-boys school in | Seneca Falls, New York, Rumsey Hall School moved to C |
| The | Seneca Falls, New York born Sutton came to the Clevel |
| the northern end of the Finger Lakes are also | Seneca Falls, the birthplace of the Women's suffrage |
| He spent his early years in | Seneca Falls, New York, a major center of water power |
| Junius Henri Browne (14 October 1833 | Seneca Falls, New York - 2 April 1902 New York City) |
| cted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in | Seneca Falls, New York. |
| Supervisor of | Seneca Falls. |
| d to the bar in 1834 and commenced practice at | Seneca Falls. |
| anizing the first women's rights convention in | Seneca Falls. |
| Rumours had spread that a number of key | Seneca figures had been attempting to provoke rebelli |
| Specialties, Inc., Ralcorp Holdings, Inc. and | Seneca Foods Corporation. |
| A portion of the | Seneca fought the British during Pontiac's Rebellion |
| They also own | Seneca Gaming and Entertainment in Irving; Seneca All |
| Adjacent properties owned by the | Seneca Gaming Corporation are not located on Seneca t |
| Street and John B. Daly Blvd, is owned by the | Seneca Gaming Corporation. |
| The | Seneca Gaming Corporation is non-sovereign and theref |
| Seneca Gardens is a city in Jefferson County, Kentuck | |
| t district), Original Highlands, Phoenix Hill, | Seneca Gardens, Strathmoor Village, Strathmoor Manor, |
| y Open was a PGA Tour event that was played at | Seneca Golf Course in Louisville, Kentucky in the lat |
| I surrendered after the | Seneca had fired four-inch shells at me. |
| ted to the bar in 1894, commencing practice in | Seneca; he was clerk of the Kansas Court of Appeals i |
| Elbert attended | Seneca High School in Seneca, Missouri and was a stan |
| Home games are played at the campuses of | Seneca High School and Ballard High School. |
| Unseld starred on a | Seneca High School team that won two state championsh |
| tary Center, Wattsburg Area Middle School, and | Seneca High School. |
| arkway Forest, Henry Farm, Don Valley Village, | Seneca Hill, and Peanut communities, and with Toronto |
| Seneca Historic District in Seneca, South Carolina wa | |
| bois and Indians from the straits against the | Seneca homeland in upper state New York. |
| Piper | Seneca II which is in use for flying lessons at Asian |
| LST-515 was laid down on 3 September 1943 at | Seneca, Illinois by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Company |
| unched by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Works of | Seneca, Illinois 23 November 1943; sponsored by Mrs. |
| LST-772 was laid down on 3 August 1944 at | Seneca, Illinois by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Company |
| ST-855 by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Company of | Seneca, Illinois on 6 September 1944; launched on 27 |
| y laid down as LST 1136 on 27 December 1944 at | Seneca, Illinois by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Works; |
| LST-516 was laid down on September 6, 1943 at | Seneca, Illinois, by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Compan |
| LST-1123 was laid down on 1 November 1944 at | Seneca, Illinois, by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Compan |
| LST-607 was laid down on 2 December 1943 at | Seneca Illinois, by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Compa |
| LST-603 was laid down on 5 November 1943 at | Seneca, Illinois, by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Comp |
| SS LST-601 was laid down on 21 October 1943 at | Seneca, Illinois, by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Comp |
| ticle is about the Rock Island Line station in | Seneca, Illinois. |
| while building at Chicago Bridge & Iron Works, | Seneca, Illinois. |
| 1944 by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Company at | Seneca, Illinois. |
| 1945 by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Company of | Seneca, Illinois; sponsored by Mrs. W. B. Wynn; place |
| K's & Golden Leaf in Canada and under the name | Seneca in the United States. |
| Adobe acquired | Seneca in 1996. |
| era debut at the Royal Danish Theatre (RDT) as | Seneca in Claudio Monteverdi's L'incoronazione di Pop |
| In 1861-62, he commanded the gunboat | Seneca in the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron. |
| Besides his translations of twelve books of | Seneca, in which he was particularly interested, and |
| a historic archeological site located at West | Seneca in Erie County, New York. |
| Seneca Inc developed the original Pagemill and Sitemi | |
| Skunny Wundy: | Seneca Indian Tales, Syracuse University Press |
| build up to three Western New York casinos on | Seneca Indian land. |
| Seneca Indian Church Ground Location (330 feet fronta | |
| Missionary to the | Seneca Indians at Moscow, New York, in 1815. |
| t was the site of the principal village of the | Seneca Indians, burned by the whites during the war i |
| An Analytical History of the | Seneca Indians, New York State Archeological Associat |
| The Larkin Factory Complex Buildings (The | Seneca Industrial Center) at 701 Seneca Street is sla |
| The community was the home of the | Seneca Institute - Seneca Junior College, which was a |
| part of Washington's ceremonial adoption as a | Seneca, intended to compliment the young Virginian's |
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