-
Calvinist Puritanism.
Grindal sought refuge in
continental Europe during the
reign of Mary I. Upon Elizabeth's accession,
Grindal returned and resumed...
- A blade's
grind is its cross-sectional
shape in a
plane normal to the edge.
Grind differs from
blade profile,
which is the blade's cross-sectional shape...
- up
grind in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Grind is the cross-sectional
shape of a blade.
Grind,
grinds, or
grinding may also
refer to:
Grinding (abrasive...
- "you must not hope, now that your own
Grindal is dead, to get a
better tutor in his
place than is that
other Grindal, who
comes as near to him in sweetness...
-
James Grindal (born 1980 in Nuneaton) is an
English former rugby union rugby player who pla**** scrum-half for
Bristol Rugby. He made over 275
first class...
- In Ireland,
grinds are a form of
private tuition. The
grinds industry in Ireland,
particularly at
secondary school level, acts as a
supplement to other...
-
Enchytraeus buchholzi,
Grindal worms, (described by FrantiĊĦek
Vejdovsky in 1879) are
enchytraeid oligochaete worms. They are
found in
temperate meadows...
- up bump and
grind in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Bump and
Grind or bump-and-
grind may
refer to one of the following: Bump and
grind (dance style)...
- The
Grind may
refer to: The
Grind (TV series), an MTV
dance music show The
Grind (1915 film), a 1915
silent film The
Grind (2012 film), a 2012
crime film...
-
Grinding, also
known as juking,
freak dancing or
freaking (in the Caribbean, wining) is an
intimate and
romantic close partner dance where two or more...