「Rhode」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Rhode

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  • the union of Helios the sun god and the nymph Rhode, and the cities were named for their three son
  • on 13 September 1943; sponsored by Miss Hertha Rhode; and commissioned on 1 December 1943, Lt.
  • inal George Mundelein, with Bishops Paul Peter Rhode and Francis Martin Kelly serving as co-consecr
  • It is located near Edgewater, Maryland, on the Rhode and West Rivers, near the western shore of Che
  • He succeeded Bishop Paul Rhode as the seventh Bishop of Green Bay upon the la
  • sociation of American Law Schools 2007 Deborah Rhode Award for extraordinary contribution to public
  • ue castle, known as either Beerlegem Castle or Rhode Castle.
  • Rhode Celtic FC
  • Kimberly Rhode double trap and skeet shooter, Olympic medalis
  • g series of novels; one under the name of John Rhode featuring the forensic scientist Dr Priestley,
  • Rhode GAA is a Gaelic Athletic Association club loca
  • Rhode GAA official website
  • Professor Rhode graduated from Yale University Summa Cum Laude
  • Rhode has also produced some of the finest players i
  • uilt as a chapel of ease to Brampford Speke by Rhode Hawkins in 1867-8.
  • The first appearance for Rhode in an Offaly Football final was in 1891, howev
  • Residence Hall on Congdon Street, Providence, Rhode Island
  • It serves to connect the University of Rhode Island to points south via U.S. 1.
  • Providence Performing Arts Center, Providence, Rhode Island
  • 1822, is located on Putnam Pike in Greenville, Rhode Island in the town of Smithfield, Rhode Island
  • t The Cooper Union, School of Visual Arts, and Rhode Island School of Design.
  • embership in civic organizations including the Rhode Island Society for the Encouragement of Domest
  • ning through central Massachusetts between the Rhode Island and New Hampshire borders, runs through
  • design under Tage Frid and Hank Gilpin at the Rhode Island School of Design for two semesters and
  • After the war, Balch was a prominent member of Rhode Island society, and had six daughters and a so
  • who was born in York, England and emigrated to Rhode Island in 1740.
  • proval rating is almost 70%) and the fact that Rhode Island is an overwhelmingly Democratic state.
  • and Lamontagne's stone ender farm in Scituate, Rhode Island
  • to farming for a period and was elected to the Rhode Island General Assembly and was appointed just
  • ng Usquepaug Road (RI 138) in South Kingstown, Rhode Island near the village of Usquepaug and the U
  • ry was re-assigned to Fort Wolcott in Newport, Rhode Island and was the first commander of Fort Ada
  • International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island in 1957.
  • n Naval Yard and Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island in 1915, before returning to the comman
  • bordered by Rehoboth to the east, Barrington, Rhode Island and Swansea to the south, East Providen
  • s as a landscape architecture professor at the Rhode Island School of Design
  • This design and production studio in Tiverton, Rhode Island has their products in many places, incl
  • nanimously re-elected bishop of Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Maine, with lay participation, and
  • icut through Maine, with isolated locations in Rhode Island and Massachusetts reporting over 3 inch
  • al Torpedo Station and War College at Newport, Rhode Island as a chemist, where he discovered the M
  • un (1861), and after re-enlisting into the 5th Rhode Island Infantry with her new husband Robert Br
  • academic success, Agnew was rejected from the Rhode Island School of Mortuary Science.
  • New Hampshire and is listed by the Diocese of Rhode Island as its second bishop.
  • in Battery Gray, Fort Church, Little Compton, Rhode Island and two more were placed in Battery Ham
  • The Law and Order Party of Rhode Island was a short-lived political party in th
  • ted in the middle of the bay just south of the Rhode Island border.
  • She is one of four openly LGBT members of the Rhode Island General Assembly, alongside House Speak
  • , she sailed out of Hampton Roads and Newport, Rhode Island for Neutrality Patrol and exercises in
  • Hazard retired from the Rhode Island General Assembly in 1840.
  • WSAR then moved to Portsmouth, Rhode Island & changed frequency to 1190kc.
  • Licenses from either state are valid, but Rhode Island regulations apply.
  • nning Board from 1978 to 1984, a member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives from 1985 to 1
  • The church actively supports the Rhode Island State Council of Churches, the National
  • nal Convention according to the results of the Rhode Island Presidential Primary.
  • He was a Member, Rhode Island General Assembly in 1866.
  • he Exchange Bank, Second Vice President of the Rhode Island Art Association, and a member of the Un
  • Education: Rhode Island School of Design (USA), Bachelor of Fin
  • filiated with the American Baptist Churches of Rhode Island (ABCORI) and the American Baptist Churc
  • In 1974 the University of Rhode Island received title to the property, and the
  • was a delegate to the Continental Congress for Rhode Island in 1789.
  • 1952 and was in private practice in Pawtucket, Rhode Island in 1953, and then in Newport, Rhode Isl
  • After a few years of resistance from the Rhode Island General Assembly, the New Hope Bridge C
  • designed Sakonnet Golf Club in Little Compton, Rhode Island and of the summer colony of which it is
  • In fact, the State of Rhode Island is only 298 square miles (770 km2) larg
  • In 1786 and 1787 he served in the Rhode Island general assembly.
  • Coast Guard House restaurant in Narragansett, Rhode Island and Casey's restaurant in Wakefield, Rh
  • First Baptist Church in America in Providence, Rhode Island where he remained until his death.
  • int Lighthouse, is located on Prudence Island, Rhode Island and is the oldest lighthouse tower in t
  • She is a member of the Rhode Island Bar Association.
  • Curran endorsed Chafee in the 2010 Rhode Island gubernatorial election.
  • is one of six active airports operated by the Rhode Island Airports Corporation.
  • Viticulture in Rhode Island began in 1663 when King Charles II of E
  • The battery was organized in Providence, Rhode Island in May 1862 and mustered in for three m
  • ated from the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (the former
  • American attorney and Democratic member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives, representing
  • t Arnold as President of all four towns of the Rhode Island colony, serving for two one-year terms,
  • He was a Democratic majority leader of the Rhode Island Senate.
  • Benjamin Brayton Knight was born in Cranston, Rhode Island on October 3, 1813 to Stephen Knight an
  • He was the Head coach of the University of Rhode Island Women's Basketball team until he resign
  • ates (Jim Carrey), is a 18 year veteran of the Rhode Island State Police trooper who has been taken
  • is administration, Dyer captained a company of Rhode Island volunteers for the Civil War.
  • Daniel C. Sullivan (May 9, 1857 in Providence, Rhode Island - October 26, 1893 in Providence, Rhode
  • y who is also a Democratic party member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives, representing
  • He was the governor of Rhode Island from May 26, 1857 to May 31, 1859.
  • er was born on October 6, 1909, in Woonsocket, Rhode Island and was a descendant of William Carpent
  • From 1790 to 1843, Rhode Island elected members to the United States Ho
  • employed in various manufacturing concerns in Rhode Island and Massachusetts and engaged in the ma
  • and Geology at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island from 1878 until his death.
  • tia regiments: Massachusetts Bay provided 900, Rhode Island 180, Connecticut 300, and New Hampshire
  • In 1997, US Attorney Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island accused Luskin of "willful blindness" f
  • In 1876, Garvin relocated to Lonsdale, Rhode Island
  • tate in the Potowomut neighborhood of Warwick, Rhode Island was deeded to the State of Rhode Island
  • Caprio was a Democratic candidate for Rhode Island attorney general in 1970 and mayor of P
  • Air Force (USAAF) established one airfield in Rhode Island for training pilots and aircrews of USA
  • ge of nineteen in Company A, Twelfth Regiment, Rhode Island Volunteer Infantry, and was mustered ou
  • sonality/talent for Radio Disney's Providence, Rhode Island station WDDZ AM 550 (2006-2010).
  • He was a State lieutenant governor, Rhode Island in 1860.
  • take part in Gen. John Sullivan's campaign in Rhode Island in 1778.
  • St. Germain was elected to the Rhode Island House of Representatives from 1952 to 1
  • Fame, the Providence College Hall of Fame, the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame, and the Rhode Is
  • He returned to Rhode Island in 1869 and taught in a school in Scitu
  • while still under construction, in Providence, Rhode Island
  • d States House of Representatives elections in Rhode Island were held on November 4, 2006 to determ
  • chard A. Licht, who was Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island from 1985 to 1989.
  • He was born in Rhode Island and moved to Georgia in 1767 with his b
  • e were two such actions, against U-853 off the Rhode Island coast, and U 881, south of Cape Race, b
  • National Governors Association, Rhode Island Governor William Cole Cozzens.
  • He was clerk in the Rhode Island state legislature from 1840 until 1844.
  • Battery G, 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery mustered out of service
  • Born in Providence, Rhode Island to Arnold Green, a lawyer, and Cornelia
  • Born in Cranston, Rhode Island to John Peter Carl Weis and his wife Ge
  • y 2009 received an Honorary Doctorate from the Rhode Island School of Design.
  • He worked in Rhode Island and Massachusetts in his occupations.
  • e served as recording and reading clerk of the Rhode Island House of Representatives 1845-1850, and
  • He was born in Rhode Island in 1762.
  • Jenckes was admitted to the Rhode Island state bar in 1840.
  • Site, RI-960 is an historic site in Scituate, Rhode Island
  • Induce businesses to locate to Rhode Island by bringing RI's business taxes in line
  • on Rose Island in Narragansett Bay in Newport, Rhode Island in the United States.
  • he United States House of Representatives from Rhode Island in 1936 and served from January 3, 1937
  • reer in public life in 1907 as a member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives, displaying ea
  • l Convention and became Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island in 1959 and served until 1961 under Rep
  • Rhode Island ACLU executive director Steven Brown sa
  • er of Fine Arts degree in Photography from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1986.
  • He was elected Attorney General of Rhode Island in 1854.
  • After the adoption, the Rhode Island Department of Health, Division of Vital
  • Based at Hampton Roads into 1918, Rhode Island was transferred to Battleship Division
  • ric site on Tillinghast Rd. in East Greenwich, Rhode Island added to the National Register of Histo
  • il 1972 when they were relocated to Pawtucket, Rhode Island and became known as the Pawtucket Red S
  • After remaining at Mare Island into 1920, Rhode Island decommissioned on 30 June and was place
  • years of that war, December 1776 - late 1779, Rhode Island proper (also known as Aquidneck Island,
  • she ran for a seat in the 49th District of the Rhode Island Senate, winning 62% of the vote against
  • Collision, 2010, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, RI
  • He was born in Providence, Rhode Island on January 12, 1774.
  • ary (Allen) Robinson of South Kingstown in the Rhode Island colony, his father was a relatively lat
  • Paiva-Weed has advanced steadily in the Rhode Island Senate, being named Chairwoman of the J
  • He attended the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island in 1900.
  • li played defensive back for the University of Rhode Island Rams from 1975-1978 Faragalli began his
  • Hermann Oelrichs' opulent mansion in Newport, Rhode Island designed by renowned architect Stanford
  • unded the Universal Peace Union in Providence, Rhode Island in 1866 and served as its president unt
  • He was elected Governor of Rhode Island and served as the first Jewish holder o
  • has taught photography at Harvard University, Rhode Island School of Design, Museum School, Mass A
  • See also: List of the oldest buildings in Rhode Island
  • It is a unit of the Rhode Island Air National Guard.
  • The modern wine industry of Rhode Island began in 1975 when Sakonnet Vineyards w
  • The Rhode Island State Library, which was created in 185
  • . Michaelson (born January 25, 1922) served as Rhode Island Attorney General from 1975 to 1979 and
  • New Jersey, Reno Las Vegas, Twin River Casino Rhode Island and the new Catch A Rising Star on Broa
  • The League of Women Voters of Rhode Island
  • ) is the small hill across the bay in Bristol, Rhode Island
  • The Rhode Island Historical Society is planning to build
  • Located near the Atlantic Ocean, Rhode Island has one of the most moderate climates o
  • This division also publishes the Rhode Island Government Owner's Manual, which gives
  • , devising the non-intercourse act that forced Rhode Island to join the union, and drawing up the b
  • Chace was born Elizabeth Buffum in Smithfield, Rhode Island on December 9, 1806, to Arnold Buffum a
  • The current goal of Clean Elections Rhode Island is to pass the Rhode Island Clean Elect
  • responsibility of a separate state agency, the Rhode Island Board of Elections.
  • high school math teacher, working in Newport, Rhode Island and Concord, Massachusetts.
  • key League with the New England Blades and the Rhode Island Eagles.
  • Justice Suttell is a Little Compton, Rhode Island resident and an active member of the Sa
  • uaker Highway", after Quakers from Smithfield, Rhode Island settled here.
  • ce in Providence in 1779, and a Justice of the Rhode Island Court of Common Pleas, also in Providen
  • Saint Cuthbert's Orthodox Mission - Pawtucket, Rhode Island - ROCOR
  • adio show aired in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island and New York.
  • er months at his Kingscote Mansion in Newport, Rhode Island until the Civil War.
  • He served as Director of the Rhode Island Agricultural Lands Preservation and as
  • in Portsmouth on Aquidneck Island, also called Rhode Island from which the colony and state would l
  • Residence: Greene Farm, East Greenwich Rhode Island which remains in family hands since its
  • Suttell was elected to the Rhode Island House of Representatives as a Republica
  • in reserve on 15 May 1916 at Boston Navy Yard, Rhode Island was detached from the Atlantic Fleet th
  • At the University of Rhode Island he served as Chairman of the Department
  • of-state residents pay full price, even with a Rhode Island E-ZPass, making this bridge the only to
  • 1960 Massachusetts Open, Rhode Island Open, New Hampshire Open, Maine Open
  • November 29, 1809) was the second Governor of Rhode Island after it became a state.
  • In June 2009, he was confirmed by the Rhode Island Senate as the new Chief Justice, replac
  • t case recorded in the official reports of the Rhode Island Supreme Court.
  • niel McKee is the current mayor of Cumberland, Rhode Island since May 2004.
  • is an historic lighthouse in North Kingstown, Rhode Island .
  • n politician who is a Democratic member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives.
  • of 1812 Hopkins left the area and returned to Rhode Island due to the Quakers testimony against pa
  • Connecticut and Rhode Island also have Election Day registration, bu
  • The 2006 Rhode Island gubernatorial election took place on No
  • was born in Wales and settled in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.
  • Champlin was president of the Rhode Island Bank until a short time before his deat
  • r family in Portugal, and moved to Providence, Rhode Island at the age of 11.
  • n politician who is a Democratic member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives, representing
  • Sylvester Hill was born in East Greenwich, Rhode Island but moved to Ohio in 1840.
  • 1981) is a former Democratic member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives, representing
  • iness buying for states of Massachusetts (MA), Rhode Island (RI), Vermont (VT), New Hampshire (NH)
  • School is a school located in North Scituate, Rhode Island (in Providence County).
  • Through 2009, Massachusetts and the Rhode Island Rams have played over 130 times, and at
  • This was the last year in which Rhode Island held a gubernatorial election on the sa
  • RI-3 may also refer to Rhode Island Route 3.
  • nal blockhouse was built by Jireh Bull, son of Rhode Island Governor Henry Bull.
  • ovidence Community Theatre in East Providence, Rhode Island premiered a full-length, fan-written ju
  • The family first settled in Providence, Rhode Island before moving to Milwaukee, Wisconsin i
  • n and Margaret (Williams) Baldwin in Coventry, Rhode Island and attended the common schools.
  • War I, and was the U.S. District Attorney for Rhode Island from 1921 to 1926.
  • lected president pro tempore of the College of Rhode Island & Providence Plantations, and therefore
  • n University School of Medicine in Providence, Rhode Island and was on the faculty for more than 30
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