「Devon」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Devon

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1語右で並び替え

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  • a daughter Lucy, who married Bampfylde Rodd of Devon, a distant cousin.
  • by Ernest Jackson & Company Ltd of Crediton in Devon, a subsidiary of Kraft Group
  • rom Barnstaple to Lynton and Lynmouth in North Devon, a distance by rail of almost 20 miles.
  • Penlee Point in Cornwall and Wembury Point on Devon, a distance of about 3 nautical miles (6 km).
  • eparated in a regional and economic sense from Devon, a fact that underlines the importance of Celt
  • It lies in West Devon, about 5 miles north of Okehampton.
  • etimes called Staldon, is a megalithic site in Devon, about 5km from Harford.
  • mstock is a picturesque parish village in east Devon, about 5 miles from Tiverton and 7 or so miles
  • let in the form of an address to the people of Devon, accusing certain members of the British gover
  • a ICT Mark, Eco and Healthy School awards, the Devon Active Schools award and a platinum award for
  • er marketing executive, in 2004 in South Hams, Devon, after meeting her at university.
  • lliam and Lottie Dod settled at Westward Ho in Devon after World War II and settled to a life of go
  • Liberal Unionist in the Ashburton division of Devon, again without success.
  • On his return he played in the C&G Trophy for Devon against Lancashire.
  • made his Minor Counties Championship debut for Devon against Oxfordshire in 1953.
  • debut, Theedom also made his List A debut for Devon against Worcestershire in the 3rd round of the
  • made his Minor Counties Championship debut for Devon against the Surrey Second XI.
  • He played 2 further List A matches for Devon against Staffordshire in the 2000 NatWest Trop
  • In 1906 James Peters played for Devon against South Africa, however the tourists bel
  • Pritchard made his List A debut for Devon against Essex in the 1st round of the 1991 Nat
  • made his Minor Counties Championship debut for Devon against the Surrey Second XI.
  • Horrell made his List A debut for Devon against Essex in the 1st round of the 1996 Nat
  • made his Minor Counties Championship debut for Devon against Dorset.
  • Carter died in Tavistock, Devon, aged 62.
  • He died in Devon aged 63.
  • Tees (1980-1982), and the Managing Director of Devon Air in Devon (1982-1990).
  • Devon Air Ambulance
  • Devon Air Ambulance Devon Air Ambulance: Official si
  • The Devon Air Ambulance Trust was formed by Ann Thomas,
  • lowing the success of similar schemes, such as Devon Air Ambulance Trust and Cornwall Air Ambulance
  • The helicopters are run by the Devon Air Ambulance Trust, which is a registered cha
  • The Devon Air Ambulance is an organisation providing eme
  • It is also the second hub for Devon Air Ambulance because it is never busy.
  • It was released in the U.S. by Epyx as Devon Aire in the Hidden Diamond Caper.
  • ing instruction as authorised by the licensee ( Devon Airsports Limited).
  • Devon Alan - Tim Munn
  • ed by David Gordon Green, starring Jamie Bell, Devon Alan, Dermot Mulroney and Josh Lucas.
  • and Rector of three parishes in the county of Devon: all offices which could be carried out by cur
  • round the mouth of the River Dart in southern Devon; all three are within the modern town of Dartm
  • de in Northumberland and Knightshayes Court in Devon, all of which have interiors from the years wh
  • llate and one of the two largest enclosures in Devon along with Cranmore Castle at over 15 Acres, s
  • Devon also appeared as an interviewer in "Monty Pyth
  • East Devon also had a higher number of people living in '
  • identify him with Saint Brannoc of Braunton in Devon, although his feast day there is 21 June.
  • s Frederick Amery (1833 - 1901), of Lustleigh, Devon, an officer in the Indian Forestry Commission.
  • was nominated Master of Foxhounds of Tiverton, Devon, an office he held until 1950.
  • eton Castle overlooks the Little Dart River in Devon and was originally built from grey rubble ston
  • Cornwall and West Plymouth and a small part of Devon and East Plymouth in 1994, and these seats bec
  • est had a lot of rural branch line services in Devon and Cornwall and Wales, it also had long-dista
  • He was born in Tavistock, Devon and educated at Bradfield College, Berkshire.
  • e lives of the saints including about 100 from Devon and Cornwall.
  • Devon and Cornwall Constabulary
  • He transferred to the Devon and Dorset Regiment in 1946 and served with th
  • son of Robert Clarke of St Giles in the Wood, Devon and his wife Graciana Creemer, daughter of Joh
  • d to passenger traffic with the closure of the Devon and Somerset line on 3 October 1966.
  • This transmitter mainly serves the East of Devon and West Dorset.
  • d to passenger traffic with the closure of the Devon and Somerset line on 3 October 1966.
  • and is supported by marketing provided by the Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership.
  • Woodham, Surrey, Alton, Hampshire, Silverton, Devon and finally (before elevation to the Episcopat
  • rangement used historically in the counties of Devon and Cornwall in South West England to manage t
  • They compete in division 2 of the North Devon and are currently placed in third place.
  • ley and Chris Sabin) defeated Team 3D (Brother Devon and Brother Ray) in a tag team match.
  • ular in the two western counties (Cornwall and Devon), and had an established reputation in London,
  • . of Indiho, in the parish of Bovey Tracey, in Devon, and dying when in the office of high sheriff,
  • tt stood as a 'Literal Democrat' candidate for Devon and East Plymouth, causing the real Liberal De
  • d to passenger traffic with the closure of the Devon and Somerset line on 3 October 1966.
  • ion served isolated villages on the borders of Devon and Somerset to the west of Wiveliscombe.
  • h rugby union player who played for Hayle RFC, Devon and Cornwall Police RFC, Camborne RFC, Redruth
  • On 1 April 1967 it amalgamated with Devon and Exeter Police and Plymouth City Police to
  • Davis was born in Plymouth, Devon and joined his local club, Plymouth Argyle as
  • to Pontypridd in June 1922 before returning to Devon and joining Torquay United in 1923.
  • He was Commanding Officer of 1 Bn Devon and Dorset Regiment from 1965 to 1967.
  • ondon Waterloo station and various stations in Devon and Cornwall such as Plymouth Friary, Ilfracom
  • brooke, the son of Hugh Clifford of Chudleigh, Devon, and his wife Mary, daughter of Sir George Chu
  • st of Exeter, the A30 is dual carriage through Devon and into Cornwall, bypassing Whiddon Down, Oke
  • is a Local Nature Reserve in Ilfracombe, North Devon and is known locally as the sleeping elephant.
  • He also played List A cricket for Devon, and for the Warwickshire Second XI, and in 19
  • Halt was a small railway station on the North Devon and Cornwall Junction Light Railway, a private
  • Goldsmith was born at Plympton, Devon and was educated at Jesus College, Cambridge.
  • 750) made this journal on a visit to Cornwall, Devon and Somerset in 1724-25.
  • ir John was leading a regiment of 1,200 men in Devon, and was taken prisoner by Royal forces after
  • agreements with local FE colleges in Cornwall, Devon and Somerset to extend the provision of HE opp
  • alley is a valley of Exmoor, covering northern Devon and western Somerset, England.
  • re both from Bideford, a small coastal town in Devon, and were later married.
  • He was born in Gatcomb, Devon, and was a fellow of Corpus Christi College, O
  • Devon and Cornwall Police were criticised by the cor
  • hes took place between the Lancastrian Earl of Devon and Yorkist Lord Bonville.
  • n painters at Exeter, which developed into the Devon And Cornwall Fine Art Society.
  • ( Devon and Cornwall Record Society.
  • Devon and Cornwall County Division
  • d to passenger traffic with the closure of the Devon and Somerset line on 3 October 1966.
  • d to passenger traffic with the closure of the Devon and Somerset line on 3 October 1966.
  • rea of 12,831 km² of the counties of Cornwall, Devon and Dorset.
  • Selley was born in Topsham, Devon, and became a builder's apprentice.
  • He was educated in England at Newton College, Devon, and undetook medical training at St Mary's Ho
  • Thillens is at the northwest corner of Devon and Kedzie on land owned by the Water Reclamat
  • es (958 km2), stretching from its borders with Devon and Dorset to the edge of the Somerset Levels.
  • 1879 to serve the market town of Holsworthy in Devon and closed in 1966, a victim of the Beeching A
  • to 1943, the school moved to Ardock, Lewdown, Devon, and the school buildings were occupied by mil
  • Williams was born at Honiton, Devon and educated at Eton and Trinity College, Camb
  • he boundary of the historical division between Devon and Cornwall.
  • th Wales coast paralleled the anglicisation of Devon and Cornwall, perhaps concurrently.
  • He was born at Bideford, Devon and educated at Blundell's School.
  • He lived at Erle Hall near Plympton in Devon and died in 1903.
  • and later a clergyman, being vicar of Colyton, Devon, and afterwards of Winchfield, Hampshire.
  • t of England to the popular holiday resorts of Devon and Cornwall.
  • it is backed up by Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service.
  • ho were probably working at or in the mines in Devon and Cornwall from the days of antiquity, but t
  • of Plymouth's Park and Ride services to First Devon and Cornwall.
  • Eastern United States and from three sites in Devon and Dorset in South West England.
  • a member of the Long Parliament (representing Devon) and of Henry Rolle, chief justice of the King
  • He has since worked for BBC Radio Devon and as a scout for sometime Charlton assistant
  • southwestern portion of Edmonton, the Town of Devon and the City of Leduc and its vicinity.
  • s Looe Valley Railway Company trading arm, the Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership has run a Summer
  • In February 2009 when snow cut him off in Devon and took at flight to Manchester to join Eastb
  • on in Belgrave Hall, Leicester, and Kentisbere Devon, and produced by Wide Angle Productions.
  • He was born in Exeter, Devon and played for all three of the county's profe
  • St Buryan, Cornwall, the rectory of Shorbrook, Devon, and the offices of archdeacon and treasurer o
  • Sheppard lives in Plymouth, Devon, and is the co-owner of a Routemaster (one of
  • cis Peter Facione is the Titular Archbishop of Devon and the current Presiding Bishop of The Old Ro
  • lliam Bonville, 1st Baron Bonville of Shute in Devon and the title of 6th Baron Harington passed to
  • lt of global warming, and is locally common in Devon, and other parts of south-west England.
  • presents the Middle Devonian sequence of North Devon and Somerset.
  • n was between Team 3D (Brother Ray and Brother Devon) and Beer Money, Inc. (Robert Roode and James
  • Olga had inherited a mansion near Sidmouth, Devon and Lindemann took the opportunity to establis
  • d is less affected by the Atlantic storms that Devon and Cornwall experience.
  • owderham Castle who was bullied by the Earl of Devon, and so supported the challenge put up by the
  • rn at Borough House, Northam Burrows, Northam, Devon and his childhood experiences of voyages were
  • In 1873, the Devon and Somerset Railway opened a line from Taunto
  • Palmer was born in Northam, Devon and educated at Ashford County Grammar School
  • He has also played Minor Counties cricket for Devon and has played in one first-class match for Wa
  • The Devon and Somerset was originally operated by the Br
  • rtant essay on the Physical Structure of North Devon, and on the Palaeontological Value of the Devo
  • s son of John Carpenter, rector of Northleigh, Devon, and was born there on February 7, 1589.
  • s picturesque valley, dividing the counties of Devon and Cornwall.
  • A.J. Styles, Team 3D [Brother Ray and Brother Devon], and James Storm, accompanied by Jacqueline)
  • and is supported by marketing provided by the Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership.
  • plies water and sewerage services in Cornwall, Devon and parts of Dorset and Somerset.
  • The brigade was created as the Devon and Cornwall Brigade of the Wessex Division, l
  • film was apparently set in a lonely mansion in Devon, and was marketed with the tagline "Mad doctor
  • inly views in the south of England, especially Devon and Cornwall.
  • Reardon Smith was born in Appledore, Devon, and educated at the Wesleyan School there.
  • y, a Deputy Lieutenant of County Waterford and Devon and served as High Sheriff of County Waterford
  • erved as a teacher and minister in Collompton, Devon, and St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex, among other l
  • nts in 1536 he inherited large estates in both Devon and Cornwall.
  • d expanding the route network, particularly in Devon and Cornwall.
  • or, in the parish of Sidbury, in the county of Devon, and of Stoneleigh House, in the parish of Cli
  • a Cross is displayed at the Military Museum of Devon and Dorset, Dorchester, Dorset, England.
  • He was born at St. Mary's Church, Devon and came to Newfoundland in the 1830s to work
  • his bishop on some points of doctrine, he left Devon and purchased a small proprietary chapel in a
  • l, and landowner in counties Limerick, Armagh, Devon and Somerset
  • The station was on the Devon and Somerset Railway that ran between Taunton
  • far and wide across England, to places such as Devon and Cornwall, as well as tours starting up acr
  • died on 26 August 1951 at his home in Seaton, Devon, and his remains were shipped to Tasmania for
  • d on him rich estates forfeited by the earl of Devon; and in 1465 Blount was made lord high treasur
  • Dickson was born in Plymouth, Devon, and migrated initially to Victoria in 1854.
  • he ancient family of Maynard, in the county of Devon; and Dame Susan, his wife, daughter and one of
  • viously he had served as a team vicar in rural Devon and the city of Exeter.
  • body itself was at Branston (or Branscombe) in Devon, and Leland referred to a chapel of Saint Brew
  • He was born in Torquay, Devon and educated at King Edward VI Grammar School
  • He represented Devon and Somerset in Parliament.
  • a large Iron Age Hill fort near Dunchideock in Devon and close to Exeter.
  • hawke Kekewich, of Peamore House, near Exeter, Devon, and the grandson of Samuel Trehawke Kekewich.
  • of tin coined in the various coinage towns of Devon and Cornwall, the purchase of tin by the crown
  • Educated at Newton College, South Devon and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Bart
  • om the Vicewarden's Court of the Stannaries of Devon and Cornwall, mostly from the mid nineteenth c
  • These are concentrated in Devon and East Anglia.
  • He was born in India, educated in Plymouth, Devon, and worked as an insurance officer for 10 yea
  • and is supported by marketing provided by the Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership.
  • Hill's son, Greg, played List A cricket for Devon and Second XI cricket for, amongst other teams
  • Wessex - South West England without Devon and Cornwall
  • called anything like Hehil, but many places in Devon and Somerset were later given new names from O
  • tary Club, Nigel obtained further support from Devon and Cornwall Constabulary, Cornwall County Fir
  • interest in large landed estates in Cornwall, Devon and the Isle of Wight and he set about re-esta
  • ched on the Royalist forces gathering in North Devon, and to where they returned on 29 March 1646 a
  • A Saint Constantine is revered in Devon and Cornwall.
  • the British Army and was actually used by the Devon and Cornwall Constabulary.
  • miles (958 km2) ranging from the borders with Devon and Dorset to the edge of the Somerset Levels.
  • y suppressing smuggling in Suffolk, Essex, and Devon and patrolling against highway robbers.
  • In 1198 and 1199, William was Sheriff of Devon and Sheriff of Cornwall, along with another ro
  • and Gunwalloe, as well as East Portlemouth in Devon and two lost chapels in Wales.
  • lymouth City Council Flats were passed over to Devon and Cornwall Housing Association.
  • ire (1919), Somerset (1920), Dorset (1921) and Devon and Cornwall (1927).
  • ient legal arrangement used in the counties of Devon and Cornwall in South West England to encourag
  • A few miles west hences the start of Devon, and the red-coloured Triassic cliffs.
  • Management contracts in Devon and Cornwall with Torbay and Pool Innovation C
  • He was the son of a baker in Honiton, Devon, and was baptised on 24 April 1753.
  • as also been designated as a part of the North Devon and Hartland Heritage Coasts.
  • riously hoof-like marks, appear in the snow in Devon and continue throughout the countryside for ov
  • CBE in Fowey, Cornwall, Peter Randall-Page in Devon and Gordon Murray in Surrey.
  • and and elsewhere; it is also quite popular in Devon and Cornwall, where it is known as Hog's puddi
  • e hospital serves Plymouth and nearby areas in Devon and Cornwall.
  • Educated at Allhallows College in Devon and Hertford College, Oxford (graduated 1961),
  • n and Cann Quarry lines were sold to the South Devon and Tavistock Railway for their proposed route
  • He was Chairman of the Devon and Exeter Savings Bank between 1971 and 1975.
  • The Devon and Somerset was operated by the Bristol and E
  • y is based around the south-western portion of Devon and includes the eastern part of the city of P
  • ied relatively isolated territory in Somerset, Devon and Cornwall and possibly part of Dorset.
  • logical Site of Special Scientific Interest in Devon and Somerset, notified in 1954.
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