「sat・」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)5ページ目
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The church, like the town, had | sat empty and neglected for many years until the 19 |
being sold at auction in 1957, 'New' Berry Hall | sat empty while its new owners tried to get plannin |
hich at one time had been a food store (but had | sat empty for twenty years). |
Then, for many years, it | sat empty - cared for, but unused until its restora |
The church | sat empty for a number of years after being closed |
The building has | sat empty for most of the last two decades. |
The Sundunes we know today | sat empty for several years until some of the origi |
ld Waltham High became defunct by the 1990s and | sat empty for many years. |
From 1978 to 1985; it | sat empty after being closed as a NHS hospital and |
It | sat empty until December 1945, when it was sold at |
It | sat empty for years until in 1973, descendants of W |
It has since | sat empty except for the property manager, who is c |
But the Nobility moved on, and the castle | sat empty, a place whispered of in ghost stories to |
Since then the building has | sat empty, boarded up and fenced off. |
stadium, so as of 2011 the ballpark has mostly | sat empty. |
in OCaml and uses ABC library with an external | SAT engine. |
In 1929, Li | sat entrance examinations for and was accepted at t |
ey is dyslexic and failed to attain the minimum | SAT entrance exam score to be eligible to play coll |
Between 1286 and 1307 he | sat every year as a justice at the original Old Bai |
their new facilities with outstanding GCSE and | SAT examination results. |
utside of a BP gas station the night before his | SAT examination. |
In 2007 KS3 | SAT examinations, 85% of Year 9 students achieved a |
pproximately two-thirds of AHS seniors take the | SAT exams. |
above local and stateside scores on the CEB and | SAT exams. |
ned by the fact that Gautama Buddha customarily | sat facing east, and thus Sariputta and Mahamoggall |
Date / Start Time: | Sat February 3, 2007 / 14:15 CET |
He replies: "We must examine who | sat first in the chair, and where... |
In the parliament, which | sat first on business, 12 November 1747, he was cho |
eded to the barony after his father's death, he | sat first in Parliament on 30 July 1963. |
In 1988 Caparoso | sat for "Advanced Certificate" examinations adminis |
Wight), which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Lostwithiel |
He | sat for thirteen sittings from January to May 1790 |
Watson | sat for Portage la Prairie division in the Senate o |
Ferrers, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Castle Rising |
onstituency he represented until 1868, and then | sat for Warwickshire South from 1868 to 1874. |
hampton, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Castle Rising |
He | sat for Regina division in the Senate of Canada fro |
was the only Member of Parliament (MP) to have | sat for the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland in t |
his seat until July the following year and then | sat for Barnsley from 1889 to 1897. |
He subsequently | sat for Liverpool from 1830 to 1837, for Wigan from |
He | sat for Pictou division in the Senate of Canada fro |
Gillis | sat for Saskatchewan division in the Senate of Cana |
Butler | sat for Carlow County in the Irish House of Commons |
in 1906 for South Glamorganshire, and from 1918 | sat for Abertillery. |
ly contested Midlothian and Peebles in 1950 and | sat for Manchester Moss Side from 1950 until her re |
elected for the constituency again in 1885 and | sat for it until 1892. |
94 to 1897 as a Liberal-Conservative. McCormick | sat for Sydney Mines division in the Senate of Cana |
lymouth, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Great Bedwyn |
r Barnstaple, just after his 21st birthday, and | sat for various constituencies almost continuously |
In May 1928, he | sat for and successfully passed a demanding State s |
rnwall), which he chose to represent, and never | sat for St Germans |
Sudbury, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for St Mawes |
Sharpe | sat for Manitou division in the Senate of Canada fr |
iskeard, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for St Germans |
ough, a seat he would hold until 1832, and then | sat for Cambridge University from 1832 to 1835. |
arliamentary candidate at Stockport in 1906 and | sat for Eddisbury, Cheshire from 1910 until his dea |
d again for a few months later in 1880 and also | sat for Kirkcudbrightshire between 1885 and 1906 an |
It | sat for one term from 3 September 1654 until 22 Jan |
Aylesbury, a seat he held until 1818, and later | sat for Newtown from 1821 to 1830, for Yarmouth (Is |
Kickham | sat for Cardigan division in the Senate of Canada f |
ntered the English House of Commons in 1660 and | sat for New Romney together with his father until t |
ntered the British House of Commons in 1795 and | sat for Northumberland first in the Parliament of G |
in the new Parliament of the United Kingdom and | sat for Kildare from 1801 to 1802. |
He | sat for Essex division in the Senate of Canada from |
Member of Parliament for Devonport in 1832, and | sat for that constituency until he accepted the Chi |
thin the Lloyd George government, and from 1918 | sat for Abertillery. |
, he defeated Philip Callan, who had previously | sat for Co. Louth as a Home Ruler but had fallen ou |
He represented the Whig interest and | sat for Calne 1831-32, then Tavistock 1832-35. |
Fortescue | sat for a number of boroughs in Cornwall from 1689 |
Their son was another William Forester and also | sat for Wenlock. |
he left the Progressive Conservative party and | sat for a time as an independent member. |
He | sat for the county of Somerset in 1378, 1382, 1388, |
He | sat for Mille-Isles division in the Legislative Cou |
hingley, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Haslemere |
morland, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Haslemere |
He | sat for this seat until he was appointed a judge in |
He only | sat for a short time, but voted for the first Exclu |
on Vaccination which was initiated in 1879 and | sat for seven years. |
tzGerald entered the Irish House of Commons and | sat for Dingle until his death. |
icester, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Malmesbury |
nding petition against one of the elections, he | sat for both boroughs throughout the Parliament |
t was prorogued for the election - hence, never | sat for the Liberal Democrats, and it was not a Lib |
It was while Turnor | sat for Hertford that he served as Speaker of the C |
ent for Bradford (1860-1874), having previously | sat for Rochdale from 1852 to 1857. |
th in 1818, a seat he held until 1821, and then | sat for Haslemere from 1826 to 1832 and for Leeds f |
He | sat for the seat until he died. |
Socialist Review, on whose editorial board Foot | sat for 19 years, collected together many of his ar |
ayter was returned to parliament for Wells, and | sat for that constituency till 6 July 1865. |
Scotia House of Assembly from 1863 to 1867 and | sat for Lunenburg in the Senate of Canada from 1872 |
After his A/L from 1968 to 1971 he | sat for external exams conducted by the government |
Emerson | sat for Saint John-Albert, New Brunswick division i |
He | sat for Digby-Clare division in the Senate of Canad |
er of Parliament has been Simon Hughes, who has | sat for the various Bermondsey seats since a by-ele |
He | sat for Wigan from 1768 to 1780 and Middlesex from |
McCall | sat for Simcoe division in the Senate of Canada fro |
s first MP, William Houldsworth, had previously | sat for Manchester. |
s the first time that the Court of Chivalry had | sat for approximately two centuries, since 1732. |
She recently | sat for the New Zealand television series The Sitti |
In the latter year he | sat for Trim in the Irish House of Commons. |
In the intervening period he | sat for Tamworth in 1698-1700. |
ended Mill Hill School in North London where he | sat for his O' level and A' level examinations. |
tsmouth, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Hythe |
l of Economics and the University of Geneva and | sat for the Bar at Gray's Inn, where he won first-c |
The Parliament | sat for the first time on 18 February 2011. |
He then | sat for Eltham, the successor seat and since 1997 h |
He | sat for Bletchingley in the two periods between sit |
He then | sat for Dunbartonshire from a 1932 by-election unti |
In the brief parliament of February 1701 he | sat for Dover, and at the election in November 1701 |
He | sat for the Monmouthshire boroughs in the Parliamen |
In 1933, Fryar, an Ulster Unionist member | sat for the general election of 1933 and defeated t |
embly in America, and, with Mr. Walter Shelley, | sat for Smythe's Hundred when they met at Jamestown |
cted to Dungannon District Council, on which he | sat for twelve years until he lost his seat in 1993 |
He | sat for several sessions as a member of the assembl |
Tasneem | sat for her O Levels (privately, through the Britis |
Sutro | sat for portrait artist David Dalhoff Neal in 1889 |
shire in his first parliament, that which first | sat for on business, 27 January 1728 (N.S.). |
lition of the constituency in 1832, and he then | sat for North Lincolnshire until defeated in the 18 |
From 1837 to 1841 Molesworth | sat for Leeds, and acquired considerable influence |
Rainville | sat for Repentigny division in the Senate of Canada |
The commission | sat for four years and submitted the G D Khosla Rep |
Lady Lavery | sat for more than 400 portraits by Sir John. |
He | sat for the constituency of Cirencester from 1841 u |
th in 1900, a seat he held until 1918, and then | sat for Hammersmith South until 1929. |
and 1830, and then, after the Great Reform Act, | sat for Ludlow from 1839 to 1840, and for East Surr |
to 1820, for New Romney from 1830 to 1832, and | sat for East Somerset from 1834 to 1865 as a Conser |
rother, Charles, was elected to replace him and | sat for Surrey throughout the Parliament. |
Alston, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Winchelsea |
In 1820, Burd | sat for a portrait by Charles Willson Peale. |
e is dated to 1612, are we to believe that Anne | sat for a picture between 12 November and the end o |
me Court of the Northwest Territories, where he | sat for cases in the Northern Alberta District. |
r Tamworth, a seat he held until 1878, and then | sat for Staffordshire North until 1880, when he los |
Subsequently he | sat for Donegal Borough until the Act of Union in 1 |
The Third Protectorate Parliament | sat for one session from 27 January 1659 until 22 A |
Bristol, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Winchelsea |
ntil 1906, and again from 1923 to 1924; he also | sat for Liverpool Abercromby between 1906 and 1910 |
He | sat for Glasgow Partick (UK Parliament constituency |
8, the rule that requires at least a 700 on the | SAT for NCAA eligibility. |
Andover, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Whitchurch |
The hotel closed in the mid-1980s and | sat for ten years without an owner. |
Riley some commissions, and eventually himself | sat for him. |
applied even when Sinhalese and Tamil students | sat for the examination in English. |
McIntyre | sat for Mount Stewart division in the Senate of Can |
Stanfield | sat for Colchester division in the Senate of Canada |
He | sat for Dingle, the same constituency his father ha |
t to his protege William Pulteney, who not only | sat for the borough himself for much of his career |
he Royal College of Physicians, London she also | sat for the Doctorate in Medicine of the University |
tituency his father had represented before, and | sat for it until his death in 1749. |
An uncle, Robert, | sat for Wiltshire in the parliament of 1316, was a |
William Archer Redmond | sat for Wexford as a member of the Home Rule Party |
phew of John Edward Redmond (1806-1865) who had | sat for the same seat, also as a Liberal M.P., and |
He | sat for La Salle division in the Senate of Canada f |
ills dealing with private Water companies which | sat for the longest time in sixty years. |
He | sat for Winnipeg division in the Senate of Canada f |
She was also reported to have | sat for days speaking to no-one and weeping uncontr |
Rankin then | sat for Perth North division in the Senate of Canad |
for Troyes, he elected to represent Troyes, and | sat for that constituency until his death. |
He was elected and | sat for Edinburgh Leith from 1970 until 1979. |
Grant | sat for Montague division in the Senate of Canada f |
of 1837 he returned to the House of Commons and | sat for the constituency again until 1847. |
of 1614 and 1624-5, and either he or his father | sat for the same borough in 1604-1611. |
In July 1977, he unsuccessfully | sat for the bar, passing it in the spring of 1978. |
ber of Parliament (MP) for Greenock in 1910 and | sat for the constituency until his death (from 1931 |
Then at the suggestion of Davitt | sat for south-east Cork from 1900 as a member of th |
He | sat for one term, and was a member of the Justice c |
He later | sat for Lanarkshire, Honiton, and finally the Isle |
He | sat for London division in the Senate of Canada fro |
The fifth Baronet | sat for Beaumaris and Denbighshire and was also Lor |
became a judge of the Court of Appeal, but only | sat for eight years until ill health forced him to |
l recreates the skin color of an individual who | sat for Kim while he painted their portrait. |
Between 1713 and 1727, he | sat for Dundalk in the Irish House of Commons. |
ing Wycombe, in the Liberal interest, and later | sat for Middlesex (1847-57), Dover (1857-9), Liskea |
harcoal drawing portraits in September 1940, he | sat for a second picture by Orde - this time a full |
as a commissioner at the Trial of Charles I and | sat for a total of six sessions and unlike his elde |
r where McCartney added another vocal, the song | sat for a month before flutes were added on 20 Octo |
Frank Cousins | sat for sculptor Alan Thornhill for a portrait in c |
arliament; he rarely contributed to debates and | sat for four years on the low-key Accommodation and |
Comeau | sat for Clare division in the Senate of Canada from |
It reached number one again on 19 May, where it | sat for four weeks, while her debut album reached n |
He | sat for Northumberland division in the Senate of Ca |
After the expulsion of the Long Parliament, he | sat for Suffolk in the First Protectorate Parliamen |
He | sat for the constituency until the 1818 general ele |
uence in choosing the Members of Parliament who | sat for the island's three boroughs; he took advant |
turned early, and returned to the House when it | sat for the spring session in late March. |
versity, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Hastings |
He | sat for that constituency until 1676, when he was c |
rs from the University of Ceylon, Ahmed Marikar | sat for the Ceylon Civil Service (CCS) exam and pas |
n the Parliament of 1661-1679, and subsequently | sat for the city of Cambridge until his retirement |
Thereafter she | sat for Clydesdale until 1987. |
He then | sat for the South Devon parliamentary constituency |
In 1868 the same two MPs who had | sat for East Norfolk before the dissolution were re |
en courtier and royal official Thomas Chiffinch | sat for him, and was so much pleased with his portr |
Between 1789 and 1796, he | sat for Kilkenny County in the Irish House of Commo |
From 1692 until his death, he | sat for Carlow County in the Irish House of Commons |
slative Council of Quebec from 1943 to 1944 and | sat for Kennebec division in the Senate of Canada f |
onshire and Northampton while the third Baronet | sat for Northampton. |
Devizes, which he chose to represent, and never | sat for Calne |
ion was immediately issued, and Courtenay never | sat for Ashburton |
As bishop, Balfour | sat frequently in parliament, his first recorded ap |
The 38th Parliament of British Columbia | sat from 2005 to 2009, replacing the 37th parliamen |
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