「Linen」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Linen

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  • The first thing she did was to give the dirty linen a good wash in a bath tub in the cellar.
  • It stains the skin and linen a deep yellow or brown, a coloration which may
  • In 2000, the British Linen Advisors was formed by the acquisition of the
  • Those who had never even seen linen all their lives I clothed in byssus-cloth from
  • The 44 booklet pages were bound in linen and made of a special paper with a lacquer pri
  • In Roman times, wool, linen, and leather clothed the European population;
  • st pure Body from the tree, wrapped it in fine linen, and anointed it with spices, and placed it in
  • begun to deal largely in raw cotton as well as linen and soon afterwards developed into one of gene
  • Made from cotton or linen and traditionally dyed brown or indigo to dist
  • 906-1980), a textile artist who specialized in linen and damask, designed the original altar cloths
  • and shaatnez (clothes containing a mixture of linen and wool).
  • rom the air with "projectiles carried by small linen and paper balloons."Xiphophilos
  • g items such as a £199 dvd player, £150 on bed linen and £60 on towels.
  • The chief industry is the manufacture of linen and linen handkerchiefs, which is also carried
  • id they would bring her “country butter, clean linen, and comfort”.
  • The river was widely used to power linen and other mills in the past.
  • Perth, Scotland 1790) was a leading Perthshire linen and later cotton manufacturer.
  • cceeded him as managing director of the family linen and clothing companies.
  • and amateur astronomer, was a manufacturer of Linen and twine in the city of Dundee.
  • Its manufactures are lace and linen and it has a brisk trade in livestock, oil and
  • dustrial centre, in particular in the areas of linen and ship building.
  • f 19 June 1875, John Walsh opened a small baby linen and ladies' outfitting shop, at number 39 High
  • ides manufactures of brandy, flour, oil, soap, linen and cloth, it has an active trade in wheat, wi
  • , refers to the biblical taboo on interweaving linen and wool, which a Hebrew reader would grasp as
  • culture, stockbreeding, and the manufacture of linen and woollen cloth.
  • most beautiful headboards, best tapestry, best linen and covers, best dishes, ring goods and jewels
  • zed citizens of Philadelphia in making woolen, linen and cotton fabrics.
  • n southern Egypt, Dreyer discovered records of linen and oil deliveries which have been carbon-date
  • prior to the 19th century, chemically treated linen and animal tissue (intestine or bladder) are t
  • pillows, throws, picture frames, candles, bed linen and bathroom accessories.
  • he was there to pick up Colonel Heard's soiled linen and was admitted to his cell.
  • We sat at long tables with white linen and our first course arrived: a handful of blu
  • , painted black and containing fowl wrapped in linen and meat possibly from a goat may also belong
  • onsisted of pictures drawn onto a silk or fine linen background, worked in lines of fine black silk
  • the Naval Academy Museum had sewn a protective linen backing to one side to help secure the fabric
  • t used a solution of calcium hypochlorite in a linen bag to treat water.
  • own expense, six leather buckets and two stout linen bags, each marked with his name and the name o
  • George married Sara Linen Ballantine on April 26, 1881.
  • In 1919, the British Linen Bank was acquired by Barclays Bank based in Lo
  • Deputy governor of the British Linen Bank
  • Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow, the British Linen Bank also in Glasgow, and the Britannic House
  • ed a deal with Barclays to acquire the British Linen Bank, with Barclays taking a 35% stake in the
  • He served in a law office and in the British Linen Bank, then as factor for Sir Charles Ross's es
  • 06 it formally changed its name to the British Linen Bank.
  • and Tietjens had in the scene turning out the linen basket and pelting each other with linen.
  • is actually Manuel, who has awakened from the linen basket, still hung over.
  • kname "Dope", inventing a technique for doping linen before stretching it over the airframe.
  • ebes was supplied with the mortuary materials, Linen, Bitumen, Naphtha, Frankincense, Myrrh, and ca
  • ew Teeling and in 1802 switched careers from a linen bleacher to journalism.
  • As chemist to the Irish Linen Board he devised a new, more economical, bleac
  • ed, they returned to Prague, and began a small linen business, and in 1808 commenced, with a single
  • County Antrim, Grimshaw worked in his family's linen business.
  • where he started work as a draper working with linen, but then, together with his son, took up bota
  • embalming process (such as bags of natron and linen), but the remains of food used in the funerary
  • worn, the Ephod is usually described as being linen, but did not constitute complete clothing of a
  • Kiahan are often made of linen, but other materials such as cotton can be emp
  • Zaccaria where the abbess presented him a new linen camauro crafted by the nuns.
  • ural is 21 feet high by 41.5 feet wide, oil on linen canvas.
  • It is called a 'corno' and was worn over a linen cap.
  • capital of the British Empire; Belfast was the linen capital.
  • of Scotland's trade, covering sectors such as linen, cattle and coal.
  • Main goods traded there were linen, cattle and salt.
  • n Market House - now forming part of the Irish Linen Centre/Lisburn Museum
  • rly 1760s, William Sandeman opened two further linen centres: Milntown (now Milton) Easter Ross and
  • It is said that patchouli was used in the linen chests of Queen Victoria in this way.
  • in "The Coat Closet", but a second area, "The Linen Closet" (specially programmed as a silent area
  • probable that in the early centuries only one linen cloth was used which served both for altar-clo
  • sted in the establishing of the manufacture of linen cloth in the village.
  • om the Latin corpus, "body") is a square white linen cloth, now usually somewhat smaller than the b
  • goods such as jewellery, pottery, stone bowls, linen cloth, copper tools, and cosmetic palettes wer
  • The Shroud of Turin is a length of linen cloth, claimed by some to be the burial shroud
  • and seeth the linen clothes lie,
  • saw the linen cloths lying,
  • He saw the linen cloths lying,
  • Here you can find everything from matryoshkas, linen cloths and handicrafts, to Russian crystal and
  • her changes included setting policy in the way linen cocktail napkins would be folded and the shape
  • ter Folk and Transport Museum, which lists the linen companies with the associated names of people
  • races its roots to the creation of the British Linen Company which was formed in 1746 by a Royal Ch
  • ty of Oxford before becoming the director of a linen company in Northern Ireland.
  • He worked at the British Linen Company's bleachfield in Saltoun, East Lothian
  • thern Ireland, where he became a director of a linen company.
  • gs of natron, animal bones, floral collars and linen containing text dated to the final years of th
  • The manufacture of linen continued to flourish for some years, but at p
  • h of fabric made from vegetable fiber (such as linen, cotton or jute) that has been converted via p
  • ay the pipe, while striking the strings with a linen covered stick held in the other hand.
  • It was made of pure linen, covering the entire body from the neck to the
  • de, Menswear Womenswear, Toys, Furniture, Home Linen, Crafts, Fabrics and an Appliance Department b
  • he began his career as a linen damask designer and worked in William Ewarts l
  • masks were usually woven in silk, but wool and linen damasks were also woven.
  • aintenance, envionmental services, laundry and linen distribution, plant operations, energy managem
  • He became a linen draper in London and married Anne, the daughte
  • aker noted that he owed "Christopher Levite, a linen draper of the city of York" just over £5.
  • eenage years when he worked in Newcastle for a linen draper who was a Quaker, but Walker did not be
  • Charles was the son of a linen draper and grandson of the prominent Methodist
  • t is likely that he was actually a Mr Beyer, a linen draper of the Cheapside corner of Paternoster
  • His daughter Elizabeth married a linen draper's son named John Potter who became Arch
  • After being employed for some time in a London linen draper's, he opened, about 1786, a draper's sh
  • Munro was a linen draper, senior freemason and popular raconteur
  • Fleay, the son of a linen draper, graduated from King's College London (
  • d Dod, late of Cornhill, now of Austin Friars, linen draper, and John Miller, senior, of Dunstable,
  • He started his business career as a London linen draper, before becoming a merchant in about 17
  • Scott's father was a linen draper.
  • 91, and had been an apprentice to a grocer and linen draper.
  • ade, and plant incriminating evidence in Tim's linen drawer.
  • 1 Chronicles, 15:27] "and David was wearing a linen ephod" [NAS Bible translation; 2 Samuel, 6:14]
  • reaching Europe, and during this period Irish linen experienced somewhat of a revival.
  • l Jaffe was the father of Otto Jaffe, a Jewish linen exporter and former Lord Mayor of Belfast.
  • It is worked on Hardanger or linen fabric which has a "count" of 22 to 29 threads
  • More refined woolen and linen fabrics and even silk were now being produced.
  • brothers, John and George, presumably from the linen factory of John Henning & Co. in the Waringsto
  • distribution, had been stealing blankets, bed linen, flour and food, including sixty boxes of wate
  • Oak panelled rooms, including a rare ' linen fold' room, Tudor windows and carved fireplace
  • has neither gown nor kirtle nor petticoat, nor linen for smocks, nor kerchiefs, sleeves, rails, bod
  • War I: flax was shipped to Ireland to produce linen for use in the manufacture of airplane wings.
  • d service professions to save money from using linen formal shirts for uniforms.
  • Linen from KV54 containing hieratic writing bearing
  • These Linen Garments were worn only once, with new ones be
  • much: 6 bronze vessels, 10 deben of copper, 15 linen garments, a shroud, a blanket and a pot of hon
  • Linen gets burnt and surgical sharps lose their shar
  • ommodities, and import kerosene, cotton seeds, linen goods, petrol, and sugar.
  • other setback as it lost its premises in White Linen Hall to make way for the construction of the n
  • Belfast (the Belfast Reading Society, now the Linen Hall Library predates it by just over a decade
  • y (1712-33), Dr Steevens' Hospital (1719), the Linen Hall (1722), and the Royal Barracks (1701 onwa
  • Linen Hall Library moves into permanent premises in
  • Troubled Images Exhibition, Linen Hall Library, Belfast, August 2010
  • He formally worked in the Linen Hall Library, in Belfast, where he was supervi
  • lk and Transport Museum, Armagh County Museum, Linen Hall Library, and Harbour Commissioners Office
  • Notable buildings on the square include the Linen Hall Library and the Scottish Provident Buildi
  • Blenkarn then sold the goods - 250 dozen linen handkerchiefs - to an innocent third party, Cu
  • Lindsay & Co were manufacturers of linen handkerchiefs, amongst other things.
  • He was apprenticed to a firm of linen importers in Manchester, and in 1813 first bec
  • the original use of certain cloths of figured linen in the treasury of Monza which Barbier de Mont
  • Flax was woven into linen in nearby Germantown.
  • Tashiro often works in natural fabrics such as linen in earthy colors.
  • The Dhobi of Mumbai wash their linen in the Mahalaxmi area known as Dhobi Ghat.
  • e archaeologists found Henu's mummy wrapped in linen in a large wooden coffin and a sarcophagus dec
  • ries that relied on overseas markets, e.g. the linen industries.
  • ted to the development of the wool, cotton and linen industries.
  • In the 18th century, the local linen industry was based on the same site, the remai
  • torically been an industrial town in which the linen industry predominated as a source of employmen
  • Ballingarry had a vital weaving and linen industry until the Great Famine in 1845.
  • ries, with particular emphasis on the flax and linen industry is illustrated with a permanent displ
  • ortant market town and centre for the flax and linen industry before becoming a milk and dairy prod
  • initial aim of the Company was to promote the linen industry, although it soon moved into banking
  • with closer to 100,000 people dependent on the linen industry.
  • y Belfast merchant who made a fortune from the linen industry.
  • Villiers, established the village to develop a linen industry.
  • timber, iron and slate and later flax for the linen industry.Local legend has proved to be a very
  • ly made of wool, or half wool and half silk or linen; it may have been corded or plain, and was usu
  • Embroidered linen jackets were worn as informal dress, and were
  • ankincense, myrrh, bitumen, natron, fine woven linen, juniper oil and copper amulets for the mortua
  • Writing for Dirty Linen magazine, Ivan Emke, in referring to the origi
  • which this parish adjoins, near the extensive linen manufactory called Hawton's Mills.
  • Linen manufacture became by the 1760s a major Scotti
  • The other industries are distilling and linen manufacture.
  • 22 November 1817 - 1 August 1889) was an Irish linen manufacturer and Unionist politician who sat i
  • He was a linen manufacturer and merchant and became president
  • h hosted 140,000 trees, was then bought by the linen manufacturer John Grubb Richardson who lived i
  • nded by his father in 1832 and was the largest linen manufacturer in Dunfermline, Fife.
  • She married linen manufacturer William Edward Greeves (1890 - 19
  • ckhouse (1720-1798), a Quaker flax dresser and linen manufacturer, and his sons Jonathan (1747-1826
  • linen manufacturers in 1891.
  • Duff was the director of a linen manufacturing company.
  • ronze) in Seattle, USA, Lycia conceived of The Linen Memorial in 2001 after exhibiting in North Bel
  • The Linen Memorial was initially exhibited in Northern I
  • The Linen Memorial will be a feature at the Flax and Lin
  • The Linen Memorial commemorates those killed in 'The Tro
  • The Linen Memorial, conceived and created in 2001 by scu
  • In 2007, it exhibited The Linen Memorial, a piece made from almost 400 Irish l
  • R. Terry, brewer-distiller Patrick Skelly, and linen merchant James Dean.
  • e "French gentry", descended from the Huguenot linen merchant Louis Crommelin, they were not at all
  • outh Yorkshire, England was built in 1856 by a linen merchant called Henry Richardson.
  • f James Nicholson Richardson, a wealthy Quaker linen merchant, and Anna Grubb, from Clonmel, who li
  • William Jacob traded from London variously as linen merchants and 'warehousemen'.
  • rickfergus, County Antrim, born into family of linen merchants whose fortunes suffered during the c
  • ave dual titanium liners and handles made from linen micarta with titanium bolsters.
  • ") and the English word mill (referring to the linen mill around which the village grew).
  • independent supermarket located on the former linen mill site, they are part of the Nisa group and
  • was born and raised in Belfast and worked in a linen mill from 1952-90 where she soon became an act
  • As a linen mill it processed flax and supplied canvas to
  • The town's old linen mill was built in 1809.
  • The ruin of the old linen mill can be seen on the outskirts of the villa
  • ate, County Westmeath in Ireland, the son of a linen mill owner.
  • time of the War with France), also owning two linen mills and large estates in places as diverse a
  • The area upstream of Armagh has many former linen mills that were built to use the waterpower of
  • m pen-and-ink and pencil manuscript on tracing linen, mounted on paper (original 41 cm x 41 cm).
  • shabby figure, bedecked in crumbling lace and linen, not undernourished despite her long exile."
  • Purple and Fine Linen, novel; adapted to film as Three Hours (1927)
  • The White Linen Nurse 1913
  • merous health-code violations, including dirty linen, old bedding, bed bug stains, mold growing on
  • painted by artist, Xavier Gonzales, is Belgian linen on canvas using zinc white, earth and cadmium
  • The main store for bed linen on the Plymouth service was at Old Oak Common
  • serves as the supply room where CCs get fresh linen once a week.
  • rmed with short green woolen jackets and white linen or doeskin pants, somewhat mimicking the Briti
  • eplaced with civilian clothing such as a white linen or plaid flannel shirt sewn by the soldier's w
  • The Model 1858 could fire linen or paper cartridges made by Starr, and could a
  • It is a three-sided piece of linen or cotton, of which the base measures 4 feet a
  • In 2010, Grotjahn's oil on linen painting Untitled (Lavender Butterfly Jacarand
  • ith thin washes of gouache or tempera on silk, linen, paper, and gold leaf.
  • Light industry, including a linen plant and a textile mill, as well as food indu
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