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Etymologies
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Examples
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It alsostocks a wide range of publications from historical andcultural associations from north and south of the border: the Ulster Historical Foundation, for example, and the Royal Irish Academy in Dublin.
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In 1903, Meyer founded the School of Irish Learning, which was later absorbed into the Royal Irish Academy.
Later Articles and Reviews W.B. Yeats 2000
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Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, vol. 52, pp. 25-33.
The Sun Is Not 2009
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The Irish Historic Towns Atlas project was established by the academic publishers, the Royal Irish Academy in 1981.
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A question has arisen whether certain important objects from the Royal Academy collection normally exhibited in the National Museum of Ireland, including the Tara Brooch and the Ardagh Chalice, actually "belong" to the Royal Irish Academy as I wrote.
'Treasures of Early Irish Art': An Exchange Greene, David 1978
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The Minister began to discuss the project in the second half of 1975, when I was President of the Royal Irish Academy, and those with whom he talked were the Provost of Trinity College and myself.
'Treasures of Early Irish Art': An Exchange Greene, David 1978
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He is right in saying that the idea came from the then Irish Minister for Education, Richard Burke, but wrong in saying that "his principal ally in Dublin has been Frank Mitchell, who is President of the Royal Irish Academy."
'Treasures of Early Irish Art': An Exchange Greene, David 1978
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The text of the Táin is found in whole or in part in the facsimilé reprints published by the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, 1870 and following; viz.: the
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The Royal Irish Academy contains another manuscript translation of the Táin (24, M, 39), by John
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Ballymote_ (_c. _ 1391) in the possession of the Royal Irish Academy, a miscellaneous collection in prose and verse of historical, genealogical and romantic writings.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 2 "Baconthorpe" to "Bankruptcy" Various
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