sluggard

  • 71slug — I. noun Etymology: Middle English slugge, of Scandinavian origin; akin to Norwegian dialect slugga to walk sluggishly Date: 15th century 1. sluggard 2. a lump, disk, or cylinder of material (as plastic or metal): as a. (1) a musket ball (2)… …

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  • 72sluggardness — noun see sluggard II …

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  • 73Dodo — For other uses, see Dodo (disambiguation). Dodo Temporal range: Late Holocene …

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  • 74Ivanhoe — infobox Book | name = Ivanhoe orig title = translator = caption = Ivanhoe UK paperback cover ifdc| log=2008 May 17 author = Sir Walter Scott cover artist = country = United Kingdom language = English series = Waverley Novels genre = Historical… …

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  • 75Alice's Adventures in Wonderland — Alice in Wonderland redirects here. For other uses, see Alice in Wonderland (disambiguation). Alice s Adventures in Wonderland   …

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  • 76P. G. Wodehouse — Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse KBE Wodehouse in 1904 (aged 23). Born 15 October 1881(1881 10 15) Guildford, Surrey, England, UK …

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  • 77Pollarding — is a woodland management method of encouraging lateral branches by cutting off a tree stem or minor branches two or three metres above ground level. The tree is then allowed to regrow after the initial cutting, but once begun, pollarding requires …

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  • 78Duke of Aquitaine — Map of France in 1154 The Duke of Aquitaine (Occitan: Duc d Aquitània, French: Duc d Aquitaine, IPA: [dyk dakitɛn]) ruled the historical region of Aquitaine (not to be confused with modern day Aquitaine) under the supremacy of …

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  • 79Louis V of France — Louis V (c. 967 – 21 May 987), called the Indolent or the Sluggard (from French Louis le Fainéant , meaning Louis Do Nothing ), was the King of France from 986 until his early death. The son of King Lothair and his wife Emma, a daughter of the… …

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  • 80William Gould — The Rev. William Gould A.M. was an English cleric and naturalist.He was born at Sharpham Park, Somerset, son of Davidge Gould, and educated at Exeter College, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1732, aged 17; he gained his B.A. in 1736. He was… …

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