「cecil」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| He built, with his brother | Cecil, a successful circuit of some sixty cinemas an |
| she married the British aristocrat, John F. A. | Cecil, a descendant of William Cecil. |
| Cecil A. Miller was elected speaker. | |
| Cecil A. Marsh (15 July 1895-1984) was an English pr | |
| Cecil A. Dolecheck (born May 30, 1951) is the Iowa S | |
| According to | Cecil A. Smith, "It was a novel show, even for a per |
| Cecil Abercrombie played for United Services RFC and | |
| ncis owed his introduction at court to William | Cecil; about 1547 he obtained employment by the priv |
| layed on West Virginia radio station WSAZ with | Cecil Adkins from 1927 to 1933. |
| om Punch magazine, 10 November 1920, depicting | Cecil advocating a design for the League of Nations |
| May 1, 2009, along with Brian Wolfe and Brett | Cecil, after Toronto demoted Brian Burres, David Pur |
| uired by the Navy 26 February 1944 and renamed | Cecil after a county in Maryland. |
| 1560-1, and in 1565 wrote a protest to William | Cecil against the queen's retaining a crucifix in he |
| Cecil Albert de Lautour (1845-1930) was a 19th centu | |
| Cecil Albert de Lautour from 1876 to 1884 | |
| chasing Officer along with his contemporaries, | Cecil Aldin and Sir Alfred Munnings. |
| At the suggestion of Dudley Hardy (along with | Cecil Aldin, a life-long friend), he studied art in |
| Sir | Cecil Algernon Cochrane (1869 - 23 September 1960) w |
| Cecil Algerton "Red" Causey (August 11, 1893 in Geor | |
| On 2 March 1921, Duckworth married | Cecil Alice Scott-Chad (born 1891), the daughter of |
| Cecil Allen Blanchard (17 April 1929 - 25 October 20 | |
| Marmaduke | Cecil Allenby is an English first class cricketer wh |
| Cecil's brother Egerton Cecil also represented Hamps | |
| Cecil's brother Aubrey Cecil also represented Hampsh | |
| Long | Cecil Ammunition |
| The | Cecil and Hermione Alexander House is a modern house |
| heim Fellowship in 1992, and was appointed the | Cecil and Ida Green Distinguished Professor at the U |
| - 1813), Thomas Scott the Commentator, Richard | Cecil, and Henry Foster. |
| ities of Brooks by his two sons, rugby players | Cecil and Jumbo, who were also students at Bedford S |
| t Cunningham was born in Buffalo, New York, to | Cecil and Grace Cunningham; he has a brother, Patric |
| Both Gibson and Green referred to Gibson as " | Cecil Green's most expensive friend" due to his enco |
| ouse of Delegates representing District 34A in | Cecil and Harford Counties. |
| ion was diverse; he attended public schools in | Cecil and Harford Counties before matriculating at t |
| Day and Foxe probably met through | Cecil, and the two became close collaborators. |
| the school's career-record chart behind Chuck | Cecil and Jackie Wallace. |
| ara Palmer as Sarah, John Heath Goldsworthy as | Cecil, and Clifton Webb as Percy. |
| e appealed to Lord Robert Dudley and Secretary | Cecil and acquainted them with his version of the ca |
| He had a wife, Margaret | Cecil, and three daughters, but there are suggestion |
| s included Graham Payn, Maidie Andrews, Sylvia | Cecil and Winifred Ingram. |
| Watches, Clutton, | Cecil and George Daniels, B. T. Batsford, Ltd., Lond |
| essor of Physics at MIT, where he has been the | Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Physics since 1983 |
| Fairweather Band, which also featured Malcolm | Cecil and Brian Lemon. |
| y was born in Weyburn, Saskatchewan to parents | Cecil and Nora Montgomery. |
| Cecil and Mildmay visited Chatsworth in October, and | |
| Humphrey" Havard, J. A. W. Bennett, Lord David | Cecil, and Nevill Coghill. |
| In 2004 | Cecil and Christine De Loach started a new winery, H |
| y Thompson, Graham Bond, Cyril Davies, Malcolm | Cecil and Dick Heckstall-Smith. |
| nflict over reform of the House of Lords, when | Cecil and Smith led an organised disruption of the H |
| ard Medical School and soon joined his brother | Cecil and colleagues Alice Hamilton and David L. Eds |
| Other notable faculty included | Cecil and Fran Thomas who were instrumental in estab |
| ndidates were returned unopposed: Lord Eustace | Cecil and Sir Henry Selwin-Ibbetson. |
| ndeer special, Legend of the Lost Tribe, which | Cecil and Riley co-wrote won an International Emmy f |
| at Chismville and runs north, meeting AR 96 at | Cecil and continuing north for about three miles to |
| a and the counties of Anne Arundel, Baltimore, | Cecil, and Harford in Maryland, with headquarters in |
| De Loach Vineyards was started in 1976 by | Cecil and Christine De Loach, and was one of the fir |
| e WA Goldfields town of Boulder, and impressed | Cecil Andrews, and in 1905 was made head of Perth Bo |
| Cecil Andrus, incumbent Governor of Idaho | |
| ll as a selection of shorts from the Beany and | Cecil animated television series. |
| Cecil Arden, a mezzo-soprano with the Metropolitan O | |
| Signs featuring | Cecil are becoming rare, as newer expressway signage |
| Prince and | Cecil are the only father-son combination in MLB his |
| Cecil Armstrong Gibbs (10 August 1889, Great Baddow, | |
| The RNCM has regularly awarded a | Cecil Aronowitz Prize for viola. |
| gh Wood were premiered by Margaret Kitchin and | Cecil Aronowitz at the 1960 Aldeburgh Festival. |
| e), Emanuel Hurwitz and Ivor McMahon (violin), | Cecil Aronowitz (viola) and Terence Weil (cello). |
| t), Emanuel Hurwitz and Ivor McMahon (violin), | Cecil Aronowitz (viola) and Terence Weil (cello). |
| Biography and entries to | Cecil Aronowitz in allmusic |
| Terence Weil and | Cecil Aronowitz) "which remained constant throughout |
| arly years other players in orchestra included | Cecil Aronowitz, Francisco Gabarro, Richard Adeney, |
| Charles P. | Cecil arrived at San Diego, her home port, on 20 Nov |
| On 21 May, | Cecil arrived in Subic Bay, P.I., for transport and |
| The Rt Rev | Cecil Arthur Cherrington (1877-1950) was an eminent |
| Sir | Cecil Arthur Spring-Rice GCMG GCVO (27 February 1859 |
| urham, and obtained a licence, through William | Cecil, as a general preacher throughout the kingdom |
| Derek | Cecil as the Movie Man |
| Cecil as caricatured by Spy (Leslie Ward) in Vanity | |
| a mild-mannered IRS agent, Jim Prufrock (Derek | Cecil), as he travelled to the mysterious desert tow |
| Back on earth, in | Cecil's bed chamber, Rosa lies in bed and Cecil asks |
| Cecil Aspinall-Oglander, Nunwell Symphony (London, U | |
| b | Cecil associated himself with the non-coalition wing |
| In November 1942, Rear Admiral | Cecil assumed command of the USS Helena (CL-50). |
| Hugh | Cecil Asterley (born 10 May 1902 - 1973) was a Briti |
| Lamar John Ryan | Cecil at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judge |
| By age 10 | Cecil attracted notice from talent agents in New Yor |
| h spacious grounds the theatre was designed by | Cecil Aubrey Masey and Roy Young (possibly following |
| Cecil Aubrey Gwynne Manning (23 May 1892 - 12 April | |
| The suburb is also served by buses along | Cecil Avenue, Albany Highway and other routes. |
| Major | Cecil Aylmer Cameron CBE DSO (17 September 1883-19 A |
| His son, | Cecil Aylmer Cameron, was also a distinguished Army |
| daries of the neighborhood are roughly between | Cecil B Moore Ave (north), Girard Ave (south), Front |
| umbia Avenue in North Philadelphia was renamed | Cecil B. Moore Avenue in his honor. |
| Woman, starring Geraldine Farrar; directed by | Cecil B. DeMille |
| career in 1930 with an uncredited role in the | Cecil B. DeMille film Madam Satan. |
| ter De Leon, had been filmed before in 1914 by | Cecil B. DeMille and Oscar Apfel. |
| After Five is a 1915 comedy film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille and Oscar Apfel. |
| he Dream Girl is a 1916 drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| West is a 1915 comedy-Western film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| The | Cecil B. Day Graduate and Professional Campus of Mer |
| d Foreign Press Association awarded Beatty the | Cecil B. DeMille award, presented at the Golden Glob |
| Lost and Won is a 1917 drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille and Frank Reicher. |
| Cecil B. DeMille as himself | |
| Cecil B. Demented OST (2000) | |
| Cecil B. DeMille: A Biography . . | |
| God Forgot is a 1917 romance film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| culty and students of Mercer University on the | Cecil B. Day Campus in Atlanta, Georgia. |
| heater when it presented the world premiere of | Cecil B. DeMille's The Greatest Show on Earth (which |
| ure directed by Alan Hale, Sr. and produced by | Cecil B. DeMille through his DeMille Pictures Corpor |
| Cecil B. Ferguson (August 19, 1883, Ellsworth, India | |
| Cecil B. Day Butterfly Center | |
| story, beginning with a 1914 film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille, continuing with a 1946 movie, and |
| The Squaw Man (1931) is a film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| s the first film thought shot in Hollywood was | Cecil B. DeMille's feature film The Squaw Man (1914) |
| the Fraternal Order of Eagles in connection to | Cecil B. DeMille, director of the famous 1956 film a |
| brary serves as the information center for the | Cecil B. Day campus of Mercer University. |
| Man from Home is a 1914 drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| story, beginning with a 1914 film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille and including a lavish 1960s televi |
| 19, he moved to Los Angeles and signed on with | Cecil B. DeMille as a cameraman and subsequently wor |
| Her father William C. deMille and her uncle | Cecil B. DeMille were both Hollywood directors. |
| red by North 29th Street, Columbia Avenue (now | Cecil B. Moore Avenue), North 30th Street, and Oxfor |
| ary Pickford in Daddy-Long-Legs, and later, in | Cecil B. DeMille's Male and Female, opposite Gloria |
| Dan Castellaneta as | Cecil B. DeMille |
| Cecil B. Moore Homes North Philadelphia | |
| ilate's wife was called “Proculla” in the 1927 | Cecil B. DeMille epic The King of Kings; Majel Colem |
| Ghost Breaker is a 1914 drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille and Oscar Apfel and based on the Br |
| He was set to be honored with the | Cecil B. DeMille Award at the January 2008 Golden Gl |
| The Captive is a 1915 drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| In 1926 | Cecil B. DeMille made a biography of him with the ti |
| Jack Prince designed the track; | Cecil B. DeMille was another co-owner. |
| ss Expressway had a mascot, a swamp frog named | Cecil B. Sawgrass, who appeared on signs greeting mo |
| It aired as the drama of the week on | Cecil B. DeMille's Lux Radio Theatre on March 22, 19 |
| Along with | Cecil B. Moore Station, this stop provides access to |
| Scenes from | Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments were filmed |
| North West Mounted Police is | Cecil B. DeMille's first film in Technicolor, releas |
| Why Change Your Wife?, directed by | Cecil B. DeMille; starring Gloria Swanson, Thomas Me |
| udal, Victor Varconi and Henry B. Walthall for | Cecil B. DeMille Pictures, and that same year, The H |
| For the 1915 | Cecil B. DeMille film, see Carmen (1915 Cecil B. DeM |
| hort drama film directed by George Melford and | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| Cecil B. DeMille remade the film in 1958 in Technico | |
| 1929) is a drama film produced and directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| He and Lansbury also featured in | Cecil B. deMille's biblical epic Samson and Delilah |
| Lonesome Pine is a 1916 drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| and Columbia Avenue (which in 1987 was renamed | Cecil B. Moore Avenue after the civil-rights leader) |
| The 1914 film was directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| he Golden Bed is a 1925 drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| 1927: The King of Kings directed by | Cecil B. DeMille |
| 1926: The Volga Boatman directed by | Cecil B. DeMille |
| Darkfeather was | Cecil B. DeMille's first choice to portray the India |
| oodbury, actor Bela Lugosi, the re-modeling of | Cecil B. De Mille's estate in Los Feliz, and the mak |
| Cecil B. Demented is also featured as a character in | |
| The main event, which was | Cecil B. Demille's The Ten Commandments, was finally |
| For the 1927 | Cecil B. DeMille film, see King of Kings (1927 film) |
| eet of Clay (1924) is a drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille, starring Vera Reynolds and Rod La |
| Fool's Paradise, directed by | Cecil B. DeMille; starring Conrad Nagel, Mildred Har |
| Written in Stone: Making | Cecil B. DeMille's Epic The Ten Commandments. |
| A butterfly at | Cecil B. Day Butterfly Center |
| The center was named in honor of | Cecil B. Day, a Christian philanthropist and the fou |
| In 1995, she received the Golden Globe | Cecil B. DeMille Award. |
| Kindling is a 1915 drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| Cecil B. DeMille | |
| It was produced and directed by | Cecil B. DeMille from a screenplay by Harold Lamb, E |
| For the 1924 film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille, see Feet of Clay (film). |
| of small roles in higher budget films such as | Cecil B. DeMented, The Replacements and The Watcher |
| odless Girl (1928) is a drama film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille, shown for years as his last comple |
| and also lobbied for parts for her in several | Cecil B. DeMille productions. |
| The | Cecil B. Day Butterfly Center is located at Callaway |
| , Clarence Brown, Charles Coburn, Gary Cooper, | Cecil B. DeMille, Walt Disney, Irene Dunne, Victor F |
| The Arab is a 1915 adventure film directed by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| venture-drama film directed by Oscar Apfel and | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| The film was introduced on camera by | Cecil B. DeMille. |
| e-teamed with Cooper, playing Calamity Jane in | Cecil B. DeMille's The Plainsman (1936), and appeare |
| and film scholar specializing in the films of | Cecil B. De Mille. |
| son film, Male and Female, (1919), directed by | Cecil B. de Mille. |
| Studies by him, edited with a memoir by Robert | Cecil Bald and with a portrait frontispiece, was pub |
| It was officially named | Cecil Ballow Baseball Complex in December 1987 in ho |
| Cecil Ballow Baseball Complex is the home to the Tar | |
| Cecil Baring, later 3rd Baron Revelstoke (1864-1934) | |
| Officer Eric | Cecil Barker Sr. EOW: January 16, 2008 |
| Currey, | Cecil Barr (2001). |
| Cecil Barry - Peter Norcutt | |
| Cecil Barry - James Lorrimer | |
| d starring Carl Brisson, Madeleine Carroll and | Cecil Barry. |
| Sir | Cecil Beaton (1904-1980)- Photographer and stage des |
| Cecil Beaton attempted to have all the copies destro | |
| Sir | Cecil Beaton the photographer lived at Reddish House |
| Cecil Beaton | |
| Cecil Beaton was also a published and well-known dia | |
| yed an ex-Cambridge graduate as his assistant, | Cecil Beaton, until Beaton was taken on by Vogue. |
| hion photographers Irving Penn, John Rawlings, | Cecil Beaton, and Paul Radkai. |
| 1942, issue of Life magazine, photographed by | Cecil Beaton, who described her as an “Asian Venus” |
| al dress, including the work of Boris Aronson, | Cecil Beaton, Eugene Berman, Stewart Chaney, Elizabe |
| sses and settings were introduced, designed by | Cecil Beaton. |
| Included were many photographs taken by | Cecil Beaton. |
| Among the costumes, the gowns were designed by | Cecil Beaton. |
| ragon Rapide, flown by two British MI6 agents, | Cecil Bebb and Hugh Pollard, was chartered in Englan |
| Captain | Cecil Bebb was a British MI6 officer and freelance p |
| power at the October 1924 general election and | Cecil became Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. |
| Rev Richard | Cecil became minister there in March, 1780; he died |
| Cecil began commuting to Los Angeles and appeared in | |
| 1926), younger daughter of | Cecil Bernard Gunston, MC, and his wife Lady Doris H |
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