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Etymologies
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Examples
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Brickwall, which is occasionally shown, is a noble old country mansion, partly Elizabethan and partly Stuart.
Highways & Byways in Sussex E.V. Lucas
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During the visit her Majesty changed her shoes, and the discarded pair is still treasured at Brickwall, the neighbouring seat of the Frewens, the great family of Northiam for many generations.
Highways & Byways in Sussex E.V. Lucas
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He still measured his distances by true and not by artificial reckoning: he knew quite well that Brickwall Farm was a long way off when you were tired and no distance at all when you weren't.
Mrs. Miniver 1939
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A fisherman from Ushant and a fisherman from Stornoway are both citizens of the same relentless country; and Nicollier, the farmer with whom Mrs. Miniver had made friends at the village fête, had expressed in a different tongue precisely the same feelings and opinion as Tom (Brickwall) Iggulsden.
Mrs. Miniver 1939
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Judy's private mile, most likely, was the cart-track through the fields from Starlings to Brickwall Farm -- her favourite walk.
Mrs. Miniver 1939
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Brickwall, Northiam; and one sold by Kerslake of Bristol, for 7s. 6d., to the Rev. John Frewen Moor, of Bradfield, Berks.
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• Look-ahead Brickwall limiting with no overshoots, less then 0.2 ms Delay
AvaxHome RSS: 2009
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• Look-ahead Brickwall limiting with no overshoots, less then 0.2 ms Delay
AvaxHome RSS: 2009
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• Look-ahead Brickwall limiting with no overshoots, less then 0.2 ms Delay
AvaxHome RSS: 2009
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• Look-ahead Brickwall limiting with no overshoots, less then 0.2 ms Delay
AvaxHome RSS: 2009
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