- of the
abhorrers, who
supported the
action of the king. "The
frolic went all over England," says
Roger North; and the
addresses of the
Abhorrers which...
-
Abhor (or Amba Hor) and
Mehraela were a
brother and
sister who were
martyrs for the
Christian faith.
Etymology of the word "
Abhor": from
Latin abhorrēre...
-
horror of the vacuum) or
plenism (/ˈpliːnɪzəm/)—commonly
stated as "nature
abhors a vacuum", for
example by Spinoza—is a
hypothesis attributed to Aristotle...
- Catholic.
Those who were not
prepared to
exclude James were
labelled "
Abhorrers" and
later "Tories".
Titus Oates applied the term Tory,
which then signified...
- Duke of Monmouth, the
eldest of Charles's
illegitimate children. The
Abhorrers—those who
thought the
Exclusion Bill was abhorrent—were
named Tories (after...
-
Yellow Submarine. They are a
fictional army of
disagreeable beings that
abhor all music,
allegorically representing all the bad
people in the world. Their...
- do****ented it in the 19th century. The
Eastern Orthodox Slavic po****tion
abhorred this practice.
Tattooing of
young girls and boys in
Bosnia and Herzegovina...
- speaking, her
enemies divide themselves into
three classes: first,
those who
abhor her both as a
means and as an end of progress,
opposing her openly, avowedly...
- and
atheist communism. The path is for all the
people of the
world who
abhor the
dangerous confrontation between the
Warsaw and
North Atlantic military...
- book
Setsuyo Ochiboshu published in 1808,
states that the
kanji 坂 was
abhorred because it
means "returns to the earth," and thus 阪 was used. The kanji...