「stood」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| the structure in a similar state of disrepair | stood a number of old stables used to quarter horses |
| e Gurkha garrison of Charikar, Major Pottinger | stood a siege of fourteen days, and then made an adv |
| Before us, a mile or more across the water, | stood a vessel, with the barest shreds of canvas flu |
| Labour won all the seats and no other party | stood a full set of candidates. |
| No woman ever | stood a chance with Housman, |
| Inside the bastions | stood a guard-house, chapel, doctor's lodging and th |
| The old church which | stood a quarter of a mile north-west of the village |
| Adjacent to the winch house | stood a stone marker that had existed for 90 years p |
| and Liberal candidates but in 1906 Labour also | stood a candidate, James Brown. |
| However the Conservatives | stood a full slate of 63 candidates and were hopeful |
| Full in the middle way there | stood a lake, |
| He successfully | stood a M.P. for Athenry in the 1634 Irish parliamen |
| At the top of South Mount Hawkins | stood a historic Fire lookout tower that was built i |
| rsial choice, and the Independent Labour Party | stood a candidate against him. |
| He | stood a full 300 feet taller than the 600 foot tall |
| the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation also | stood a candidate, retired Air Vice-Marshal Albert E |
| California Rangers were paid $150 a month and | stood a chance to share a $5000 reward for the captu |
| Outside the refectory usually | stood a lavabo, or large basin for hand-washing. |
| bare rocky point, upon the extremity of which | stood a low square wooden tower, painted white. |
| There | stood a golden palace that is the residence of Sindr |
| The party | stood a single candidate in the 1935 general electio |
| on of the village was Muslim and at its center | stood a mosque. |
| ce Hotel now, and a hundred yards further west | stood a sand hill nearly ninety feet tall. |
| The building | stood a short distance in front of the present churc |
| At the center of this complex | stood a keep, the Grosse Tour (fifteen meters in dia |
| the Virgin and Tarrant Abbey farm, where once | stood a nunnery. |
| the name from a recently demolished pub which | stood a short distance away in Johnson Street. |
| on when the Social Democratic and Labour Party | stood a candidate against him. |
| ling the mosque from the north, west, and east | stood a 3.30-meter wide portico. |
| The Nationalist Party | stood a candidate against him, Mr James Collins, who |
| ta Yimkong - the top of the hillock where once | stood a fortress and the students' Jubilee Tower, th |
| ng to local legend, on this bedrock ridge once | stood a stone fortress that was built by Welsh explo |
| old manor saw some life over the many years it | stood, a symbol for the town. |
| This was a spot on which later | stood a chapel dedicated to Saint Peter, later a bas |
| The Liberal Party, who had not | stood a candidate in 1970, but had won 16% of the vo |
| Opposite the school | stood a toll house on the Bronygarth and Wern turnpi |
| an: 'ein Stein') was placed where the bust had | stood, a tradition that is still kept (the stone is |
| outer baileys, on the north side of the castle | stood a tall five-sided keep, the eastern parts of w |
| The original public house | stood a few hundred yards away, at the bottom of the |
| Had he not | stood, a Conservative Party candidate would have bee |
| It has | stood abandoned since that time. |
| After its closure, Calvary | stood abandoned for over 60 years before being demol |
| arge paper mill on the site around 1911, which | stood abandoned and blighted for many years after it |
| For many years afterwards, Kaunas Castle | stood abandoned. |
| It | stood about 70 cm (2 ft 4 in) tall and was very simi |
| It | stood about 65-75 cm high in life, roughly the size |
| nt (fuscina, fascina or, rarely, tridens) that | stood about as high as a human being. |
| er legs than its predecessor Hyracotherium and | stood about 60 cm {6 hands} tall. |
| an Emperor Penguin and the largest ones having | stood about 1.5 meters tall. |
| The astrarium | stood about 1 metre high, and consisted of a seven-s |
| d to have weighed 484 kilograms (1,070 lb) and | stood about 1.3 m tall (4.3 ft) at the shoulder, muc |
| ls Hotel, now stands where her adobe home once | stood, about a half-mile north of the present-day Ro |
| If pointed, the stone would originally have | stood about 8.5 metres (28 ft). |
| zki was a very tall child; most of the time he | stood above his peers by a foot or more. |
| It | stood above the quays of the River Orwell at Ipswich |
| It | stood above competitors like Norton Internet Securit |
| were set up in a row, and one of the dinosaurs | stood above each with a bucket. |
| A cupola and bell once | stood above the front door. |
| fe derives from the small sandstone cliff that | stood above the surrounding marshes, it had a red ap |
| Coity Mountain is likely to have | stood above the ice during the last ice age as, unli |
| th the government view that even right to life | stood abrogated during Emergency. |
| 6, he was convicted on bribery charges, having | stood accused of arranging $500,000 in campaign dona |
| iend Jessie M'Lachlan discovered the body, and | stood accused of having murdered M'Pherson. |
| The "picture book SS woman" | stood accused at the Auschwitz Trial in 1947. |
| arijuana kingpins Barry Foy and Les Riley, who | stood accused of smuggling 347,000 pounds of marijua |
| defendants at the four-and-a-half-month trial | stood accused of inciting the riots that swirled aro |
| Land Station was originally built in 1918, and | stood across from the former Volusia County Fairgrou |
| Dr. Sippy's house, which once | stood across the street from Viking Foods, was a sto |
| the Tang Dynasty, the Small Wild Goose Pagoda | stood across a street from its mother temple, the Da |
| The Manor House previously | stood, adjacent to the old church of St Mary Magdale |
| He | stood again in the 1935 election but again failed to |
| Kidd | stood again in 1923, without success, but defeated S |
| d after an election petition, and when Jackson | stood again at the 1868 general election, both seats |
| less than 1,000 first-preference votes when he | stood again in the same constituency as one of two L |
| el Browne over the mother and child scheme and | stood again as an Independent candidate at the 1951 |
| He | stood again in the 2005 general election and lost by |
| eral election, and failed to retake it when he | stood again in 1964. |
| Gluckstein | stood again in 1950, losing again to Harrison. |
| Selby | stood again for the Labour Party in Glasgow Govan in |
| However, he | stood again at the 1979 general election, defeating |
| He | stood again for the House of Commons in the 2006, bu |
| His Labour opponent, David Williams, | stood again at the 1922 general election and won the |
| At the 2005 general election he | stood again in Conwy, this time coming second behind |
| n returned unopposed in North Galway, but also | stood again in North Louth. |
| Thomson | stood again in Aberdeen North at the 2007 Scottish P |
| candidate Kenneth Pickthorn, and although she | stood again in 1951 and 1955, Pickthorn increased hi |
| At the 1997 general election, he was | stood again in Cavan-Monaghan, but did not regain hi |
| Yitzhak Ben-Zvi | stood again and was re-elected. |
| He | stood again at the 1973 general election for Roscomm |
| He | stood again in 1898, but the Jameson raid had occurr |
| l who had left the Scottish Unionist Party and | stood again as an Independent; he held the seat unti |
| 29, Colville won the seat, and although Clarke | stood again in 1931, the by-election victory was his |
| 1895 general election and was defeated when he | stood again in 1900. |
| rea for all bulletins, although the presenters | stood again when 5 News was relaunched in February 2 |
| He | stood again for the Northern Ireland Constitutional |
| He | stood again in Belfast North for the Northern Irelan |
| She | stood again in the Islington East constituency at th |
| umbold and was pushed into third place when he | stood again at the 1983 general election. |
| general election, and was unsuccessful when he | stood again in 1859. |
| Polson | stood again at the general election in November 1922 |
| Ramsden | stood again in Bradford North, ousting Angell with a |
| He | stood again at the 1923 election, when Taswell had r |
| O'Connor | stood again in the 2001 general election, increasing |
| rity had all been defeated by 1979; when Milne | stood again in the 1979 general election he did badl |
| He | stood again at the November 1982 and 1987 general el |
| He lost the seat in 1880, but | stood again at a by-election later that year. |
| He | stood again as an independent Whig at the general el |
| In 1907 he | stood again for Council and was tied in 6th place wi |
| He | stood again at the January 1910 election, regaining |
| He | stood again at the Islington East by-election in Feb |
| He | stood again in 1923, but Berkeley was returned with |
| He | stood again in 1865, after which he held the seat un |
| He | stood again at the Glasgow Bridgeton by-election, 19 |
| At the 1906 general election, he | stood again and was elected as a Liberal Member of P |
| He | stood again for the Senate in 1997, but was not re-e |
| He | stood again at the 1997 election, and this time won |
| She | stood again in the Northern Ireland general election |
| Lucas-Tooth | stood again for parliament in the 1945 general elect |
| Sherwood | stood again at the general election in December 1923 |
| lapsed at the 1931 general election, Essenhigh | stood again and took the seat with a majority of onl |
| Heydon | stood again for parliament in 1588, again successful |
| He | stood again in the 1906 general election, where he w |
| e 1929 general election in Aberdeen North, and | stood again in Nottingham Central at the by-election |
| In 2001 he | stood again for the SSP in Edinburgh Central in the |
| He | stood again for his seat in the 1946 elections, but |
| He | stood again for Belfast East in the February and Oct |
| Fuller | stood again for the Bedford constituency in the 2010 |
| He | stood again one more time, in Canterbury at the 1865 |
| Walkden | stood again (unsuccessfully) at the November 1922 ge |
| He | stood again at the ensuing general election in 1895, |
| She | stood again at the 1935 general election, and was ag |
| He | stood again at the general election, in 1802, but wa |
| He | stood again for the Westminster seat at the 1983 UK |
| n subsequently joined Cumann na nGaedheal, and | stood again as a Cumann na nGaedheal candidate in Co |
| At the 1992 general election, he | stood again in Dublin South Central, and in Labour's |
| He | stood again as one of two Labour Party candidates in |
| He | stood again in the 1934 Lowestoft by-election, losin |
| He | stood again in October 1974 but in this election his |
| He | stood again in Bath at the December 1910 general ele |
| He | stood again in the 1997 election to the 21st Seanad, |
| He | stood again at the by-election in February 1884 afte |
| general election, and was unsuccessful when he | stood again in December 1910. |
| Tyler | stood again at the 1979 general election, but Hicks |
| He | stood again in the 1951 UK general election, but fel |
| He | stood again in 1886, but was not elected. |
| He | stood again for the SNP at Cunninghame South in the |
| He | stood again in the 1945 as a Liberal, facing both Co |
| He | stood again in 1935, following the death of George C |
| Newcastle-under-Lyme but was unsuccessful; he | stood again for the same seat at the 1970 general el |
| t the 1987 general election, he unsuccessfully | stood again in Tipperary South, but was afterwards r |
| After the division of the constituency, he | stood again in the Kildare South constituency at the |
| Boulton | stood again at the 1924 general election, when a Lab |
| He was unsuccessful again when he | stood again in Cork South Central at the 1992 genera |
| id not stand for Parliament again, but Hancock | stood again three times, without success: in Lewes a |
| He | stood again twice, as a National Labour candidate in |
| In 2007, he | stood again for office, and with an endorsement from |
| He | stood again in Reigate at the 1931 general election, |
| He | stood again in Rhondda West at the 1922 general elec |
| Labor feared losing the seat if Campbell | stood again as its candidate. |
| n interest in politics in the 2006 election he | stood again against McLellan. |
| At the 1907 by-election he | stood again, but his share of the vote fell back. |
| Despite his poor health, Weizmann | stood again, and there were no opposing candidates. |
| He | stood again, successfully, at the 1992 election but |
| e was a prominent backer of Dr Bill Wilson who | stood against John Swinney for the SNP leadership in |
| In second match she | stood against Janelle Shepherd from Australia. |
| Looper also | stood against some fellow Republicans by opposing Am |
| He had | stood against Smith at the recent General Election. |
| e first regional election at which the PP have | stood against the UPN. |
| mpleted, the game would display a line of POWs | stood against a wall. |
| ado, was the supposed leader of the heroes who | stood against the Demon King. |
| Haughey | stood against Frank McManus for the Westminster seat |
| Later, Rakotonirina | stood against Ravalomanana in the December 2006 pres |
| At the 2005 general election, Fraser | stood against Frank Dobson in the Holborn and St Pan |
| In parliament, he | stood against the government's suppression of the fr |
| In fact, it appears that Barney | stood against fascism. |
| ay have been timber-framed, but appear to have | stood against the north wall of the church. |
| ck's running partner for the 1952 by election, | stood against him as the Labor Party candidate. |
| re-election in 2003, quite a number of people | stood against him. |
| After moving to Australia, he has | stood against the Prime Minister, Bob Hawke in two A |
| y that appeared to be supporting elements that | stood against the establishment would be savaged by |
| ongress and founded the Swatantra Party, which | stood against the Congress in the 1962, 1967 and 197 |
| ur Welsh Assembly Member for the constituency, | stood against her as an Independent and won with a m |
| whilst the other went to a TANU member who had | stood against the official TANU candidate, and immed |
| In 2001 he | stood against Iain Duncan Smith, Michael Portillo, K |
| r people with leadership personalities and who | stood against tough elements, and in turn, the negat |
| In May 1955 he | stood against Herbert Morrison unsuccessfully for So |
| Premier Jack Lang, Luchetti, a Lang supporter, | stood against Chifley. |
| a bishop of the Portuguese Catholic Church who | stood against the fascist regimen in defense of the |
| He | stood against state regulation of railroads. |
| Both Thomas William Hislop and William Chapple | stood against him in 1902 and 1905. |
| Waugh | stood against Thorpe for the Dog Lovers' Party and T |
| l party), Brian Deegan (former magistrate, who | stood against Alexander Downer), Andrew Wilkie (Gree |
| He also | stood against Alec Douglas-Home in Kinross and Weste |
| 009 and 2010 she always got to final where she | stood against Cuban Olympic medalist Yanet Bermoy. |
| At the 2004 federal election, she | stood against member Andrew Southcott in the safe Li |
| He has also | stood Against the TNIV's gender inclusive language. |
| ee-penny upright," testified as follows: "As I | stood against the Wall, [she] came behind me, and wi |
| Peter Law | stood against the official party candidate after an |
| In 1997, he | stood against Labour Minister Dawn Primarolo in Bris |
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