Anglo-Norman in Vietnamese

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Sentence patterns related to "Anglo-Norman"

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

1. Anglo-Norman Texts.

2. Anglo-Norman Studies.

3. Boistous (Middle English (1100-1500)) bustous (Anglo-Norman) 3

4. Anglo-Norman, also known as Anglo-Norman French (Norman: Anglo-Normaund), was a dialect of Old Norman French that was used in England and, to a lesser extent, elsewhere in Great Britain and Ireland during the Anglo-Norman period.

5. Allower (Anglo-Norman) Alternative form of aloer (to allow) Conjugation

6. This begins the period of Anglo-Norman dominance of Ireland.

7. Allower (Anglo-Norman) Alternative form of aloer (to allow)Conjugation

8. Allower (Anglo-Norman) Alternative form of aloer (to allow) Conjugation

9. Boistous (Middle English (1100-1500)) bustous (Anglo-Norman) Featured Games 2

10. From accord + -able, partly after Anglo-Norman acordable, Anglo-Norman and Middle French, French Accordable (of a person) affable, accommodating, well-suited, suitable, capable of being harmonized or reconciled.

11. From Anglo-Norman Alure, alour, allur walkway (behind a parapet), passage, gallery, (rare) parapet, apparently a specific use of Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French Alure speed of travel, gait.

12. From accord + -able, partly after Anglo-Norman acordable, Anglo-Norman and Middle French, French Accordable (of a person) affable, accommodating, well-suited, suitable, capable of being harmonized or reconciled.

13. From Anglo - Norman time to thirteen century, Britain was in aristocrat democracy time.

14. It is one of the very few occupied Anglo-Norman castles in Ireland.

15. From Anglo-Norman Commodious, and its source, Renaissance Latin commodiosus, irregularly from Latin commodus.

16. The agreement temporarily ended a crisis in the succession of the Anglo-Norman kings.

17. 28 The Anglo-Norman fabliaux are preserved in manuscripts that are miscellaneous literary anthologies.

18. The Roman de Brut (1155) by the Anglo-Norman author Wace was one such chronicle

19. The word "Apprompt" is an archaic, Anglo-Norman adaptation from Old French (OED)

20. The medieval words Carol and Carole (French and Anglo-Norman) might mean a popular dance song with

21. Back-formation from assets, from Anglo-Norman asetz, from Old French assez (“ enough ”).Compare Middle English Asseth.

22. The castle was originally the property of the FitzGerald family, an Anglo-Norman aristocratic dynasty in medieval Ireland.

23. Grand Hotel Belle Vue is an impressive model of Anglo-Norman Architecture with its spacious and bright rooms.

24. Other breeds that Campolina used in his herd were Anglo-Norman, Clydesdale, Holsteiner, and American Saddle Horse.

25. Back-formation from assets, from Anglo-Norman asetz, from Old French assez (“ enough ”).Compare Middle English Asseth.

26. Etymology: < (i) Anglo-Norman and Middle French contempner, Middle French Contemner (French (now rare) Contemner) to regard or …

27. Another Anglo-Norman castle at Woodford, Listowel, was built in the post-1600 period by the Knight of Kerry.

28. Along with the Breton and the Anglo-Norman, the Ardennes horse was used to create the Sokolsky horse

29. From Middle English Burgeis, from Anglo-Norman Burgeis, of Germanic origin; either from Late Latin burgensis *burgus or Frankish

30. Earl of Northumbria was a title in the Anglo-Danish, late Anglo-Saxon, and early Anglo-Norman period in England.

31. Only later, but well before Anglo-Norman invasion in the 12th century, were churches being widely constructed using stone.

32. From Middle English boistres, an alteration of Middle English Boistous, from Anglo-Norman bustous (“ rough ”), perhaps from Old French boitous (“ noisy ”)

33. Hugh of Montgomery, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury (died 1098), was an Anglo-Norman aristocrat and member of the House of Bellême.

34. From Middle English boistres, an alteration of Middle English Boistous, from Anglo-Norman bustous (“ rough ”), perhaps from Old French boitous (“ noisy ”)

35. The family is of Anglo-Norman descent and derives its name from the village of Livet (now Jonquerets-de-Livet) in Normandy.

36. [Middle English Britoun, Celt, Briton, from Anglo-Norman Britun, from Latin Brittonēs, Britons, of Celtic origin.] American Heritage® Dictionary of the

37. The gurges appears to be a purely Anglo-Norman heraldic charge, which in its earliest form was a series of concentric Annulets

38. The name Amble is for a person employed as an enameller, and derives from the Anglo-Norman-French amayler, of the same meaning

39. From Anglo-Norman adjeccion, adjeccioun, Anglo-Norman and Middle French Adjection (French †Adjection) something that has been added or appended, act of adding or appending something and its etymon classical Latin adiectiōn-, adiectiō act of adding, addition, anything added, additional clause or proviso from adiect-, past participial stem of adiicere + -iō.

40. In 1189 it had already 15.000 inhabitants, when the city was sacked by the Knights of Santiago with support of Anglo-Norman crusaders.

41. Creanced (English) Verb Creanced Simple past tense and past creancer (English) Origin & history From Anglo-Norman creancers (English) Noun creancers Plural of creancer

42. From the 12th century Bargy and the surrounding area, including the barony of Forth, saw extensive Anglo-Norman settlement following the Norman invasion of Ireland

43. In 1215, an Anglo-Norman settler, FitzStephens, built a tower house with a bawn there, which itself replaced a much older fortification, probably a ringfort.

44. Most importantly, the researchers looked at how images together with manuscripts were used to generate specific notions about the diverse communities of the Anglo-Norman world.

45. [Perhaps from Middle English contek, dissension (influenced by such words as rancorous Cankerous), from Anglo-Norman contec, possibly from Latin contāctus, past participle of contingere, to touch; see contact.]

46. Countergifts and Affidation Countergifts and Affidation Chapter: (p.107) 6 Countergifts and Affidation Source: Noblewomen, Aristocracy and Power in the Twelfth-Century Anglo-Norman Realm Author(s): Susan M

47. Beaumont Newhall (1908–1993), curator, art historian, writer, and photographer Beaumont Smith (1885–1950), Australian film director, producer and exhibitor House of Beaumont , an Anglo-Norman baronial family in England

48. From Middle English bustarde, from an Anglo-Norman blend of Old French bistarde and oustarde, both from Latin avis tarda (“ slow bird ”), which is actually contradictory as Bustards are fast runners

49. [Perhaps Anglo-Norman Aloper, to run away from one's husband with a lover, from Middle Dutch ontlopen, to run away : ont-, away from, along; see ant- in Indo-European roots + lopen, to run

50. From Middle English Actual, actuel (“active”), from Anglo-Norman actuel, Actual, and its source Late Latin actuālis (“active, practical”), from Latin actus (“act, action, performance”), from agere (“to do; to act”) + -alis (“-al”).