- Pelmanism's time come at last?". The Guardian.
Retrieved 2014-07-08. Ohayon,
Annock (2006).
Psychologie et
psychanalyse en France: L'impossible
rencontre (1919–1969)...
- Pont's / Blaeu's 1654 map and it is
close to the
River Annick (previously
Annock or
Annack Water) in the area once
known as Strathannick. The name may refer...
-
Etymology The name Annick,
previously Annock,
Annoch (1791) or
Annack Water,
possibly derives from the
Gaelic ab****n,
meaning water and oc or aig meaning...
- The
Annick Water (previously also
spelled as Annack,
Annoch (1791) or
Annock) is the
largest tributary of the
River Irvine. The
river runs from Long Loch...
- the site was
probably on the
River Annick (previously
Annoch (1791–1793),
Annock or
Annack Water) near
where the farm of
Laigh Castleton (formerly Nether...
- the "
Weeping Path,"along
which he rode,
until he came to the ford of the
Annock, at
Bridgend in Stewarton,
where he fell dead off his horse. This took place...
- of Low Chapelton,
above a mile
below Stewarton, on the
right bank of the
Annock,
there appears to have once been a chapel, the
ruins of
which were lately...
- 'Weeping or
Mourning Path' runs
upstream from the
Annick (previously
Annack or
Annock Water) Ford and this is
where the Earl's
widow is said to have wept as she...
- Blacklawhill. In 1895 a
track ran up to the
Glenouther Moor
crossing the
Annock Water by a bridge. A
sheep ree is
shown on a
field boundary below the moor...
- in
North Ayrshire, Scotland.
Annick Lodge (previously Annack,
Annoch or
Annock) and
estate was
built by
Captain Alexander Montgomery, the brother-german...