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luggie การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The name Luggie is a Scots word meaning a wooden bucket with handles.
  • On the south bound side of Stirling Road the houses back onto Luggie Water.
  • Modern maps show another balancing pond also exists which does drain south into the Luggie.
  • An extract from the Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland 1882 describes The Luggie in less than glowing terms.
  • This design feature is also present on the Luggie Aqueduct at Kirkintilloch, which opened in 1773.
  • He secured a pension for David Gray by writing a preface for " The Luggie ".
  • Parts of " " The Luggie " " have been narrated against a backdrop of the Luggie Water.
  • Parts of " " The Luggie " " have been narrated against a backdrop of the Luggie Water.
  • It is a short walk away from an area of countryside which features a river known as the Luggie Water.
  • Remains of the lade channel can still be discerned on the south bank of the Luggie, near the footbridge.
  • The Luggie W . is mentioned on that map too in large rotated handwriting but there is little clarity on the watercourse.
  • In that case the waters referred to are the Red Burn and the Luggie Water even though they do not in fact meet.
  • The lake is maintained at a nearly constant level and drains northward to the Kelvin via the Board Burn rather than into the Luggie.
  • The "'Luggie Aqueduct "'carries the Forth & Clyde Canal over the Luggie Water at Kirkintilloch, to the north of Glasgow.
  • The "'Luggie Aqueduct "'carries the Forth & Clyde Canal over the Luggie Water at Kirkintilloch, to the north of Glasgow.
  • There is an old B & W picture of a boat crossing the canal, with a train passing underneath the boat, with the Luggie flowing below the train.
  • While it doesn't mention the Luggie by name, the poem, inspired by Cumbernauld's Gaelic name, builds on the theme of watershed to east and west.
  • "' Moss Water "'- From Cumbernauld the Luggie flows past Condorrat, whose name is also from a Gaelic phrase-" Comh Dobhair Alt "-The joint river place.
  • Towards the end of the 1890s, Jane Lindsay ( also called Luggie Jean on account of having three ears according to Millar ) was murdered in a pool of water on the edge of Fannyside Moor.
  • From this point to the Luggie's confluence with the Kelvin is a distance of approximately 18 kilometres ( 11 mi ) which almost agrees with Groome of the " Gazetteer of Scotland ".
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