Definition, Betydelse, Synonymer & Anagram | Engelska ordet NOOK
NOOK
Definition av NOOK
- vrå
Antal bokstäver
4
Är palindrom
Nej
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Exempel på hur man kan använda NOOK i en mening
- The earliest record of Northolt is in 872 as the Anglo Saxon norð healum, where norð is North and healum (or hale) is a nook, corner, or retreat,.
- Other sources indicate that the name is derived from "wood ingle", meaning "woody nook", or that the name was coined anew.
- Kadammanitta played a role in reviving interest in poetry by holding thousands of recital sessions in every nook and corner of Kerala in the 1970s and 80s.
- Geomorphology describes coves as precipitously walled and rounded cirque-like openings like a valley extending into or down a mountainside, or in a hollow or nook of a cliff or steep mountainside.
- The name Bracknell is first recorded in a Winkfield Boundary Charter of AD 942 as Braccan heal, and may mean "Nook of land belonging to a man called Bracca", from the Old English Braccan (genitive singular of a personal name) + heal, healh (a corner, nook or secret place).
- It has been proposed by Dr Eilert Ekwall that the name Maghull may have been derived from the Celtic word magos referring to a plain or field, and the Old English halh referring to a corner or nook, giving the meaning of a "flat land in a bend".
- The manor and town was known as Hala (from the Anglo-Saxon word "halh", meaning nook or remote valley), until it was given by King Henry II to Welsh Prince Dafydd ab Owain in 1177 and became known as Halas Owen.
- Stanley Arena and Convocation Hall, food court, box office, fireplace lounge, breakfast nook and reservable spaces.
- Margaret Gelling associated the name Coggeshall with the landscape in which it is situated, believing that -hall comes from Anglo-Saxon healh, meaning a nook or hollow, thus rendering the name as "Cogg's nook" (with Cogg as a proper name), corresponding to Coggeshall's sunken position in the 150-foot contour line.
- The earliest reference to Bramall was recorded in the Domesday Book as "Bramale", a name derived from the Old English words brom meaning broom, both indigenous to the area, and halh meaning nook or secret place, probably by water.
- The name Westhoughton is derived from the Old English, halh (dialectal "haugh") for a nook or corner of land, and 'tun' for a farmstead or settlement – meaning a "westerly settlement in a corner of land".
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