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Etymologies
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Examples
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British submission of the Winster Constitution, which granted greater autonomy to Cyprus.
b. Cyprus 2001
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We have detailed reports of this period both from the prefect of the clergy, Winster, and from
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock 1840-1916 1913
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We may mention the salvage of the old market-house at Winster, in Derbyshire, which has been rescued by that admirable National Trust for Places of
Vanishing England 1892
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Winster was at one time an important place; its markets were famous, and this building must for very many years have been the centre of the commercial life of a large district.
Vanishing England 1892
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The Winster market-house is of great age; the lower part is doubtless as old as the thirteenth century, and the upper part was added in the seventeenth.
Vanishing England 1892
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Water, the rivers Brathay, Rothay and Winster and the rivers Kent and Bela.
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Water, the rivers Brathay, Rothay and Winster and the rivers Kent and Bela.
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Water, the rivers Brathay, Rothay and Winster and the rivers Kent and Bela.
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Lakelanders are happy to celebrate the damson tree, soon to spread its lace of white blossom over the Lyth and Winster valleys, though its very name declares its exotic origin (damson derives from Damascus, in Syria).
Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph 2010
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Lakelanders are happy to celebrate the damson tree, soon to spread its lace of white blossom over the Lyth and Winster valleys, though its very name declares its exotic origin (damson derives from Damascus, in Syria).
Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph 2010
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