Information om | Engelska ordet WICH
WICH
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Exempel på hur man kan använda WICH i en mening
- As the presumed locus of the city, Lundenburh, was moved back within the old Roman walls, the older settlement of Lundenwic gained the name of ealdwic, 'old port', "eald" and the softer form of "wic" transposed to "ald" and "wich" in Middle English orthography.
- It is also supposed that "wich" or "wych" refers to a salt town, with Middlewich being the middle town between Northwich and Nantwich.
- 5 ton pure gold and precious ston from wich he bought many land of District Mardan and 10 acre in Noshehra and some little he buried in our home our was 156 year old and we still live in it plz Sherin sister and cousin help us we r waiting for ur help I m graduation in science BSC and unmarried and 33 year old thanx for co oppoaration.
- The article discusses a "labud sattire" written by one Max Beerbohm "in wich e pautraid an immajnari karrakter kauld Enoch Soames — a thurd-rait poit hoo beleevz imself a grate jeneus an maix a bargin with th Devvl in auder ter no wot posterriti thinx ov im!" (in which he portrayed an imaginary character called Enoch Soames—a third-rate poet who believes himself a great genius and makes a bargain with the Devil to know what posterity thinks of him).
- The church at Acton and its subsidiary chapels at Wrenbury, Church Minshull and Nantwich, together with some ploughland, were given to the abbot of the Cistercian Combermere Abbey at its foundation in 1133 by Hugh Malbank, second baron of Wich Malbank.
- The name may derive from "Ulla ingas wic", where Ulla was the name of an Anglo-Saxon chief, ingas is Anglo-Saxon for "followers of", and wic, wick or wich is an Anglo-Saxon word meaning abode or dwelling place, borrowed from the Latin vicus meaning village.
- The area around was a stronghold of the Christian movement of the Waldensians wich were persecuted for their faith culminating in Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy engaged the Waldensians in battle but was repelled through guerilla warfare.
- The Latin term, pronounced with an initial 'u', was adopted into Old English as wic, wick, wich, or wych.
- An example of modern syncretistic events is the dance and parade Diablada ("Dance of the Devils") during wich traditionally honored the indigenous Uru terrible god Tiw.
- The "wich" (or wych) suffix applies to other towns in the area - namely Middlewich, Nantwich and Leftwich.
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