earls in Czech

earls <n.,pl..> šlechtici Entry edited by: B2

Sentence patterns related to "earls"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "earls" from the English - Czech Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "earls", or refer to the context using the word "earls" in the English - Czech Dictionary.

1. Counts and earls share the same rank, which is why the wives of earls are called Countesses

2. Conversely Mortimer should not have invoked the earls to revolt against the king.

3. They discovered seven in a mailroom near the embassy in Earls Court.

4. ‘a petition by the earls, barons, and Commonalty of the realm’

5. Earls, Countesses, viscounts, visCountesses, barons, and baronesses bear the styles of The Right Honourable and Lordship

6. We have heard, and what honor the Athelings won! awing the earls

7. From the Library of the Earls of HaddingtonMAY, ROBERTThe Accomplisht Cook, or The Art Mystery of Cookery

8. It may have been abandoned shortly afterward, although it remains the property of the Earls of Kintore.

9. The western half of Cumberland was part of the preserve of the Lowthers, or Earls of Lonsdale.

10. They invited him to preach in their church in the nearby village of Earls Barton every other Sunday.

11. Flight Of Earls - Barleycorn, the 1989 album The Internationalhttp://www.amazon.co.uk/Song-Ireland-Very-Best-Barleycorn/dp/B000VL2RJUI can hear the bells of

12. The earls of Pembroke and Surrey were embarrassed and angry about Warwick's actions, and shifted their support to Edward in the aftermath.

13. We have heard, and what honor the Athelings won! Oft Scyld the Scefing from squadroned foes, from many a tribe, the mead-bench tore, awing the earls

14. Another account of his deathbed scene is more credible; according to one chronicle, Edward gathered around him the Earls of Lincoln and Warwick, Aymer de Valence, and Robert Clifford, and charged them with looking after his son Edward.

15. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Aristocracy ar‧is‧toc‧ra‧cy / ˌærəˈstɒkrəsi $ -ˈstɑː-/ noun (plural aristocracies) [countable usually singular] HIGH POSITION OR RANK the people in the highest social class, who traditionally have a lot of land, money, and power dukes, earls, and other members of the Aristocracy

16. As a senior rank, probably relating, in its initial stages, to special military significance.’ More example sentences ‘Because of this we ask that for the profit of the kingdom you should grant and associate with us four bishops, four earls, four barons and Bannerets, to hear and to

17. As a senior rank, probably relating, in its initial stages, to special military significance.’ More example sentences ‘Because of this we ask that for the profit of the kingdom you should grant and associate with us four bishops, four earls, four barons and Bannerets, to hear and to

18. All the hundreds of Cornwall, from time immemorial, belonged to the Earls, and still continue to be attached to the duchy, except the hundred of Penwith; and of this, two-thirds continued to belong to the duchy in the reign of James I., the other third, together with the Bailiffry of the hundred, as attached to the manor of Conarton, was

19. (adjective) And also among the Englishmen there were certain rascals that went Afoot with great knives, and they went in among the men of arms, and slew and murdered many as they lay on the ground, both earls, barons, knights and squires, whereof the king of England was after displeased, for he had rather they had been taken prisoners."