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deid การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Gey few, and they're a'deid " but that may be a little difficult to translate.
  • Taled Tana, 29, and Samir el-Deid, 31 had bruises on their abdomens, shoulders and shins.
  • Taled Tana, 29, and Samir el-Deid, 31, had bruises on their abdomens, shoulders and shins.
  • Loudoun parish church at Newmilns has a deid bell inscribed " Countess of Loudoun . " The Kilmarnock example had the town's name and the date " 1639 " and was preserved in the town hall.
  • "There is no program to pay for deid . " But livestock assistance for feed lost could also be eakes more courage than anything I know, " Taylor said . " If going to get pretty hungry.
  • From thence all of thame, both hors and fute, convoyit these deid corps to the Abay Kirk of Halyrudhous quhair he is left inclosit in ane yll [ aisle ] till forder ordour be by his Majestie and Estaites of Parliament for the solempnitie of his Buriall.
  • The pirates were all found guilty and were condemned to be hanged on the sands of Leith ( " To be tane to ane Gibbet vpone the Sandis of Leyth, within the fflodes-mark, and thair to be hangit quhill thay be deid . . . " ).
  • It contained a variety of poems, which between them praise the valley of the North Tyne, talk about local village cricket, or tell of sad occurrences as in the " whee's deid " ( obituary ) column, and according to the sales details " and for those who don't know their cushat ( wood pigeon ) from their shavie ( chaffinch ), there's a glossary of dialect words ".
  • They made and signed a statement in preparation for the Parliament to enact Mary's abdication, which stated the letters demonstrated Mary's involvement in the murder; " in so far as by diverse her previe letters writtin and subscrivit with hir awin hand and sent by hir to James erll Boithvile chief executor of the said horrible murthour, . . ., it is maist certain that sche wes previe, art and part ( complicit ) and of the actuale devise ( plot ) and deid of the foir-nemmit murther of her lawful husband the King our sovereign lord's father ."
  • [A guard of honour of four captains with their companies, all of them in ] thair armes and displayit colouris, quha eftir a lang space marching up an doun the streitis, went out thaireftir to the Burrow mure quhair his corps wer bureyit, and quhair sundry nobles and gentrie his freindis and favorites, both hors and fute wer thair attending; and thair, in presence of sundry nobles, earls, lordis, barones and otheris convenit for the tyme, his graif [ grave ] was raisit, his body and bones taken out and wrappit up in curious clothes and put in a coffin, quhilk, under a canopy of rich velwet, wer careyit from the Burrow-mure to the Toun of Edinburgh; the nobles barones and gentrie on hors, the Toun of Edinburgh and many thousandis besyde, convoyit these corpis all along, the callouris [ colours ] fleying, drums towking [ beating ], trumpettis sounding, muskets cracking and cannones from the Castell roring; all of thame walking on till thai come to the Tolbuith of Edinburgh, frae the quhilke his heid wes very honorablie and with all dew respectis taken doun and put within the coffin under the cannopie with great acclamation and joy; all this tyme the trumpettis, the drumes, cannouns, gunes, the displayit cullouris geving honor to these deid corps.