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brushfieldの例文

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  • This was reproduced as a frontispiece to Thomas Nadauld Brushfield's'Bibliography .'
  • He also helped to set up a Jewish cooperative bakery on Brushfield Street in Spitalfields.
  • Brushfield made the career of Ralegh his main study for the rest of his life.
  • A . Gold, 42 Brushfield St .; 011-44-207-247-2487.
  • The Texas population was solely known from a brushfield near Houston and disappeared after devegetation due to industrial development in the 1980s.
  • Brushfield studied medicine and surgery at London Hospital, which he entered in 1845, and won three gold medals besides other honours.
  • In 1852 Brushfield was appointed house surgeon to Chester County Lunatic Asylum, and was first resident medical superintendent from 1854 until 1865.
  • Over the next two years, Brushfield made seven more league appearances, then left for the Victorian Football Association ( VFA ).
  • In 1968, at the age of just 24, Brushfield led Geelong West to a premiership, with a grand final win over Williamstown.
  • "' Brushfield spots "'are small, white or grayish / brown spots on the periphery of the M . D . thesis.
  • The population of the civil parish, together with neighbouring Blackwell in the Peak and Brushfield parishes, as taken at the 2011 Census, was 457.
  • Brushfield was a freemason, was elected fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1899 and was a founder of the Devon and Cornwall Record Society.
  • Recruited from Xavier College, Brushfield started out at Geelong as an 18-year-old in the 1962 VFL season, where he made two league appearances.
  • He was the son of Dr Thomas Nadauld Brushfield ( 1828 1910 ), a noted authority in the same field and expert on the life of Sir Walter Raleigh.
  • Brushfield was a pioneer of the non-restraint treatment of lunatics, and he sought to lighten the patients'life in asylums by making the wards cheerful and by organising entertainments.
  • On his retirement Brushfield settled at Budleigh Salterton, living in a Georgian house known as The Cliff, Cliff Road in Budleigh Salterton on the east Devon coast, near Hayes Barton, the birthplace of Sir Walter Ralegh.
  • Market buildings were sited on the rectangular patch of open ground which retained the name Spittle Fields : demarcated by Crispin Street to the west, Lamb Street to the north, Red Lion Street ( later subsumed into Commercial Street ) to the east and Paternoster Row ( later known as Brushfield Street ) to the south.