「ealing」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

ealing

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  • an acid jazz and funk group formed in 1985 in Ealing, a suburb of London, England.
  • y through the Westminster Archdiocese and with Ealing Abbey which hosts the school's annual Carol Co
  • Ealing Abbey has been the home for parts of the caree
  • began Christian meditation groups which met at Ealing Abbey, his monastery in West London, England a
  • under John Main's guidance he became a monk at Ealing Abbey.
  • Ealing Acton was a parliamentary constituency in West
  • There is a related article for Ealing Acton for the period from 1983.
  • y of the constituents were placed into the new Ealing, Acton and Shepherd's Bush constituency.
  • 1983 general election, and replaced by the new Ealing Acton constituency.
  • He had previously been MP for Ealing, Acton and Shepherd's Bush from 2005 to 2010 a
  • Greening contested the constituency of Ealing, Acton & Shepherd's Bush in 2001, finishing se
  • Fulham with some of the seat becoming part of Ealing, Acton and Shepherd's Bush.
  • ficial name for the constituency 1974-1983 was Ealing Acton but, in accordance with the practice ado
  • ammersmith North, then Hammersmith and finally Ealing, Acton and Shepherd's Bush from 1997 to 2005.
  • was previously MP for the West London seat of Ealing Acton from 1974 to 1997, and was Transport Sec
  • The monks of Ealing also run the Benedictine Study and Arts Centre
  • ded Richard Barnes, London Assembly member for Ealing and Hillingdon, who withdrew in July 2007 and
  • Hanger Lane is a major road in the Ealing and Park Royal areas of London.
  • the area became part of the London Borough of Ealing and Greater London.
  • He was educated at Durston House School in Ealing and Rugby School.
  • station is located in both London boroughs of Ealing and Brent
  • e seat was lost between the paired boroughs of Ealing and Hammersmith.
  • the Reverend Charles James Sharp the vicar of Ealing and Mary Frances Musgrave Sharp.
  • alling at the hospital, and promoted by Brent, Ealing, and the Park Royal Partnership.
  • orne is in the London Assembly constituency of Ealing and Hillingdon which has one Assembly Member:
  • ees-Spalding, always known as Tim, was born in Ealing and educated at Blundell's School in Tiverton
  • west London, and part of the London Borough of Ealing and the Southall post town area.
  • Ealing and Hanwell Past.
  • member of the London Assembly representing the Ealing and Hillingdon constituency and the Deputy May
  • 980s/early 90s she took on senior roles at the Ealing and Riverside Health Authorities, before movin
  • The line serves mainly the suburbs of Ealing and Greenford.
  • f Northolt split between the London Borough of Ealing and the London Borough of Brent.
  • llowing which he was offered a place at nearby Ealing Art College, famously attended a generation be
  • Staffell was attending Ealing Art College with Farrokh Bulsara, and introduc
  • Born in Ruislip, he studied at Ealing Art College and in the workshops organised by
  • ges twenty halls of residence in Inner London, Ealing, Ascot and Wye.
  • Most of what is now West Ealing at this time was open countryside and fields.
  • Born in Greenford in the London Borough of Ealing, Blanche Bingley was a member of the "Ealing L
  • Ealing Blues Festival,
  • bombing campaign which would also include the Ealing bombing of 3 August 2001 and an attempted bomb
  • Northolt Park is a park in the Ealing borough of London, England.
  • Given that Chiswick Park station is in Ealing Borough, is it technically correct to describe
  • nvited to share the old church premises by the Ealing Boy Scouts who were already holding their meet
  • South Acton, Ealing branch, opened 1880, closed 28 February 1959
  • (see 4 March 2001 BBC bombing); the second in Ealing Broadway on 3 August 2001; and the third in Bi
  • ogressively closer to Paddington: a station at Ealing Broadway (5 miles 58 chains (9.21 km) from Pad
  • travelling at around 70 mph (110 km/h) between Ealing Broadway and West Ealing.
  • The Great Western Railway built the Ealing Broadway branch (the western part of the forme
  • Ealing Broadway station is less than 2 minutes walk a
  • sover east of the station to allow trains from Ealing Broadway or West Ruislip to terminate here.
  • In 1914 - 1924 for an Ealing Broadway Station <to> Surbiton Station*, Leath
  • 1930 - 1931 a Greenford (Hare and Hounds) <to> Ealing Broadway via Uxbridge Road Independent route 2
  • The group also advocates further extensions to Ealing Broadway and Wembley Stadium, and a new line r
  • Ealing Broadway Station
  • West Ealing Broadway
  • Ealing Broadway station
  • Walpole ward, and parts of Ealing Broadway ward and Ealing Common ward were tran
  • rom 2 July 1912 until 31 July 1912 for a daily Ealing Broadway <to> Northfields Station service via
  • 6 trains per hour Ealing Broadway - Tower Hill
  • 3 trains per hour to Ealing Broadway via Hainault
  • access Crossrail to go to destinations such as Ealing Broadway and Mainhead.
  • 1 March 1883: Ealing Broadway to Windsor via a connection at Ealing
  • Ealing Broadway - Hanger Lane South - West Acton - Al
  • Acton is a London Underground station between Ealing Broadway and North Acton on the Ealing Broadwa
  • 07, the 226 replaced it between Park Royal and Ealing Broadway and route PR2 replaced the other half
  • Parts of Ealing Broadway ward and Hanger Hill ward were transf
  • It hit the platform at Ealing Broadway, breaking the arms supporting it and
  • ed a car bomb containing 45kg of explosives in Ealing Broadway, West London, England, injuring seven
  • Southern proposed an Ealing Broadway-Clapham High Street link for December
  • l London Railway's extension from Wood Lane to Ealing Broadway.
  • d two trains per hour to London Paddington via Ealing Broadway.
  • At Ealing Broadway: Great Western Main Line to Slough, R
  • erved as curate in various parishes, including Ealing, Cardiff, and English and Welsh Bicknor.
  • He continued to work as a scriptwriter after Ealing ceased production in the mid-fifties, his late
  • The film is the last disc in Ealing Classics 2009, volume 1.
  • It is in the London Borough of Ealing, close to the boundary with the London Borough
  • Many young musicians visited the Ealing Club and 'guested' with Blues Incorporated, in
  • Urquhart was educated at Rugby School and Ealing College Business School (BA 1970).
  • nded the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse and Ealing College in London, before graduating from the
  • awarded a Postgraduate Diploma in Chinese from Ealing College, London.
  • He also appeared in the Ealing comedies Whisky Galore!, The Lavender Hill Mob
  • d James, who would later go on to find fame in Ealing Comedies and the Carry on films.
  • The Ealing Comedies were a series of film comedies produc
  • is generally considered to be the first of the Ealing Comedies, and Barnacle Bill the last in 1957,
  • ecord label including backing for the original Ealing comedies.
  • Parts of the Ealing comedy The Titfield Thunderbolt were filmed at
  • the mid-1950s, including a role in the classic Ealing comedy The Ladykillers (1955).
  • He composed the score for the Ealing comedy Whisky Galore!, Turned Out Nice Again s
  • of Hinge and Bracket harks back to the era of Ealing comedy and owes a great debt to Joyce Grenfell
  • 23 June 1903: Ealing Common to Park Royal & Twyford Abbey.
  • From Ealing Common to South Harrow, the District Line was
  • s very similar to the reconstructed station at Ealing Common built at the same time, also by Heaps a
  • Ealing Common Station
  • was, together with the existing tracks between Ealing Common & Acton Town, the first section of the
  • started running on the section of line between Ealing Common and Ealing Broadway on 1 July 1905.
  • From Ealing Common to South Harrow, the District Line was
  • Ealing Common is a London Underground station on the
  • venue as it crosses the A4020 Uxbridge Road at Ealing Common to meet the A40 Western Avenue at the H
  • n 1906 the club relocated to Creffield Road in Ealing Common.
  • th sharing the route with the District Line to Ealing Common.
  • th sharing the route with the District Line to Ealing Common.
  • s electrified in 1905 a new depot was built at Ealing Common.
  • ty for Christian Meditation, was a monk of the Ealing community in the period 1959-1970 and 1974-197
  • Ealing constituency within the Middlesex, showing bou
  • e was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Ealing constituency at the 1906 general election, and
  • Elections for Ealing Council were held on the 6 May 2010.
  • Ealing Council election, 1998
  • Ealing Council election, 2002
  • Ealing Council desires to have the line connected to
  • Ealing Council is currently run by a Labour administr
  • Ealing Council is currently run by a Conservative adm
  • local council elections elects councillors to Ealing Council.
  • local council elections elects councillors to Ealing Council.
  • estic cricket, the ground is the home venue of Ealing Cricket Club who play in the Middlesex County
  • Ealing Cricket Club Ground is a cricket ground in Eal
  • It appears on a Parish map of Ealing dated 1777.
  • The Ealing Dean name is possibly derived from 'valley' or
  • ough appears to have been replaced by the name Ealing Dean at some time.
  • Houses in the area were only to be found at Ealing Dean, Drayton Green and Castle Bear Hill (now
  • il 1982, when Colin Gilbert, an architect from Ealing, designed additional gardens on the area of la
  • The present Ealing District Hospital was built in the late 1970s
  • after a merger between pre-existing sides: the Ealing Eagles (1984-1994) and the Woking Generals (19
  • Ealing East constituency within the parliamentary cou
  • general election, when was elected in the new Ealing East constituency.
  • It was then replaced by the new Ealing East and Ealing West constituencies.
  • Ealing East was a parliamentary constituency in what
  • Conference competition, and a third side, the Ealing Emus in the AFL London Social division.
  • ub based in Greenford in the London Borough of Ealing, England.
  • He died in Ealing, England.
  • y playing in Perivale in the London Borough of Ealing, England.
  • e, state-funded secondary school in Middlesex, Ealing England.
  • Born in Hanwell, now in the London Borough of Ealing, Field played for Royal Ordnance Factories in
  • Currently Tayla is CEO of Ealing Film and Television Associates with her busine
  • He followed this with the three Ealing films under his own name for which he is best
  • Promotion to Rural Dean of Ealing followed before his elevation to the Episcopat
  • Cuthbert Butler also lived at Ealing following his retirement as Abbot of Downside
  • He was a keen sportsman, playing for Ealing Football Club in his youth, and was president
  • The unit left Ealing for its refurbishment on 28 February 2008.
  • ' Ealing Gazette' newspaper column written by Sharma an
  • Educated at Ealing Grammar School for Boys, he then spent nearly
  • Buy bus: No. 65 to Ealing Green; or 83, 112, 207, 297, 427, 607, E1, E2,
  • south-west of London, that is the Boroughs of Ealing, Hammersmith & Fulham, Hounslow and Richmond u
  • West Ealing, Hanwell and Southall railway stations are the
  • scopal Area, comprising four deaneries: Brent, Ealing, Harrow and Hillingdon.
  • e in the preparatory school of Dr. Nicholas at Ealing, he was removed to Harrow, but was taken from
  • After curacies in Stoke Newington and Ealing he was the Priest-Vicar of Exeter Cathedral.
  • Notting Hill & Ealing High GDST
  • dham and Havering from no overall control, and Ealing, Hillingdon, Wandsworth and Sandwell from Labo
  • e Council, local Safer Neighbourhoods Team and Ealing Homes (the council's housing management compan
  • On 19 April 2008, it was extended beyond Ealing Hospital to Brentford County Court, via Hanwel
  • The London Bus routes 282 to Ealing Hospital and Mount Vernon Hospital and 398 to
  • Ealing Hospital
  • former grounds, the whole complex was renamed Ealing Hospital and was administered as one organisat
  • dy Patient Environment Action Team (PEAT) gave Ealing Hospital NHS Trust an “excellent” rating for f
  • ege of Music until that institution removed to Ealing in west London in 1991.
  • He was chosen as candidate for Ealing in 1884, but as the election approached, had a
  • a small neighbourhood in the London Borough of Ealing, in west London, England.
  • ater Department to designs by Abram Kellett of Ealing in 1904.
  • The school moved to Ealing in 1910, to Castlebar Road, and in 1915 moved
  • Chorley won the trophy beating Ealing in '94 and Clifton Flax Broughton in '95 whils
  • een, of Norwood Green in the London Borough of Ealing in 2004.
  • Harrison was born in Ealing in West London in 1979.
  • d of the eastern area of the London Borough of Ealing, in particular central Ealing and Acton.
  • Greenford station is in the London Borough of Ealing in west London, and is on the Greenford branch
  • on Council's flood prevention scheme plans for Ealing in the 1970s.The Brent flood prevention scheme
  • Caroline O'Connor (born 25 April 1983 in Ealing) is a British rowing cox.
  • Barry Miller (born 29 March 1976 in Ealing) is a retired English football defender.
  • wern (born Anthony Philip Swern, 30 June 1948, Ealing) is an English radio producer and music collec
  • chools and local regeneration issues to ensure Ealing is sustainable for the future.”
  • North Ealing is a London Underground station on the Uxbridg
  • At the 23rd annual Ealing Jazz Festival (July 2007)
  • concentrated his energy and playing around the Ealing Jazz Festival.
  • Born in Hertfordshire, Molloy studied at Ealing Junior School and the Ealing School of Art bef
  • In 1882, Ealing Lawn Tennis Club began life on land which abou
  • the City of Westminster, the London Borough of Ealing, London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, Lon
  • Hamilton was born in Ealing, London to a family of eight children.
  • Lawrence (born in Ealing, London on 27 July 1933) is a British former r
  • Colin Edward Thompson (born in Ealing, London on 18 October 1942) is an English/Aust
  • He was born in Ealing, London the only son of George Herbert, a dire
  • Its address is 6 Castlebar Hill, Ealing London W5 1TD.
  • Jessica Kate Brooks (born May 1981 in Ealing, London) is an actress.
  • Studio London (DSL) is a drama school based in Ealing, London, England, United Kingdom.
  • independent Catholic St Benedict's School, in Ealing, London, and later studied English and Drama a
  • Frazer Toms (born 13 September 1979) in Ealing, London, England, is an English professional f
  • n will be presented at The Questors Theatre in Ealing, London.
  • s death, he was living at 40, Mount Park Road, Ealing, London.
  • 'Callaghan had been staying in at Pope's Lane, Ealing, London.
  • Keen was born in Ealing, London.
  • Marsh was born in Ealing, London.
  • orge Bennet Chambers (born January 18, 1881 in Ealing, London; died early 1969 in Surrey) was an Eng
  • He was born in Ealing, Middlesex and educated at Allhallows School i
  • Jupp died at West Ealing, Middlesex on 24 February 1930.
  • Greenfield died at Ealing, Middlesex on September 3, 1917.
  • Bill Watkins was born in Ealing, Middlesex and represented Middlesex as a righ
  • e, Buckinghamshire, England - 27 March 1674 at Ealing, Middlesex) was a British proprietor, governor
  • own as Baberton Halliwell (7 September 1864 in Ealing, Middlesex, England - 2 October 1919 in Hillbr
  • He was born at Ealing, Middlesex, son of Robert and Emily Barratt.
  • John James Warr (born 16 July 1927, Ealing, Middlesex, England) is an English former cric
  • - 10 October 1966) was a tennis player born in Ealing, Middlesex, England where, as a young woman, s
  • Michael William Lely Kitson (born Ealing, Middlesex, on 30 January 1926, died Islington
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