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Перевод: conqueror speek conqueror


[существительное]
победитель ; завоеватель


Тезаурус:

  1. If members of a conquering nation called upon the nation they had conquered and continued to hold down to forget their specific nationality and position, to "sink national differences" and so forth, that was not internationalism, it was nothing else but preaching to them submission to the yoke, and attempting to justify and perpetuate the domination of the conqueror under the cloak of internationalism.
  2. For one instant I saw you, erect on tiptoe, ruling your orchestra and transfigured by the expression of a conqueror.
  3. A 2,000-year-old Roman coin or and Elizabeth I sixpence go for just under 100, while a William the Conqueror silver penny is a little more.
  4. "He came to England with the conqueror," says Hutchins in his History of Dorset , "with a retinue of forty seven knights of note.
  5. From William the Conqueror onwards the Church Courts are separated from the Lay Courts: the Bishop has his court; the Archbishop a superior or prerogative court; from him before the Reformation there is an appeal to the pope.
  6. Yet even in the eleventh century there was something artificial in William the Conqueror's notion of dividing England into about 6,000 knights' fees.
  7. Henry I of England, William the Conqueror's son, had left only one heir, Matilda, whom he had married to Henry V of Germany, the Holy Roman Emperor.
  8. Eubank has seen what happened to his brothers - Peter, one-time conqueror of Barry McGuigan, was particularly talented - neither of which got the business end right.
  9. To cite but one example, William de Moyon, a senior tenant of the Conqueror, brought his name from his place of origin near St Lo in La Manche, and it stayed with the family, transformed in the spoken language to Moon, and in the written to Mohun by way of such variations as Moion, Moione, Moiun, Mooun, Moun, Moune, Mown, Moyn, Moyhun, Moyun, Mahoune, Mahon, Mohum and Mohon.
  10. Several knights came to Ayrshire, one being Walter Fitzallan, whose father had moved from Normandy to England with William the Conqueror and had fought at the Battle of Hastings.
  11. The changing designs used on the coinage concentrate on warlike themes - military symbols, gods of war, figures of Victory - and especially symbols borrowed from the iconography of the conqueror par excellence, Alexander the Great.
  12. Built by William the Conqueror in thanks for his victory over King Harold - legend has it that the high altar marks spot where Harold died from an arrow through his eye.

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