- wæs synn and sacu
Sweona and Geata, ofer wid wæter
wroht gemæne, here-nið
hearda, syððan Hreðel swealt, oððe him Ongenþeowes
eaferan wæran
frome fyrd-hwate...
- wæs synn and sacu
Sweona and Geata, ofer wid wæter
wroht gemæne, here-nið
hearda, syððan Hreðel swealt, oððe him Ongenþeowes
eaferan wæran
frome fyrd-hwate...
- to have remarked, in
characteristic fashion, "Shakespeare? I ain't
never hearda him. He must be one of dem
European bums[.] Sure as **** I'll
moider dat...
-
Chuck Hittinger Cody
Linley Chuck Hittinger George John
Heard John
HeardA Martin Brody Mark
McGrath Mark
McGrath Skye
Vivica A. Fox Vivica...
- what work he had done before, the
composer angrily replied, "Well, I
never hearda you, either!": 107
Herrmann based his
score for Jane Eyre on the score...
- wæs synn and sacu
Sweona and Geata, ofer wid wæter
wroht gemæne, here-nið
hearda, syððan Hreðel swealt, oððe him Ongenþeowes
eaferan wæran
frome fyrd-hwate...
- enclosure,
farmstead or village.
Hardy is
derived from a
personal name,
Hearda, and ēg,
Anglian for
island or dry
ground in a well-watered land. It has...
-
fifteen miles from Norwich. The
villages name
means 'Homestead/village of
Hearda's people'. The
Eastern Daily Press, on 7 June 2012,
reported that the watermill...
- Somerley, home of the
Earls of Normanton. The name
Harbridge probably means "
Hearda's bridge". In the
Domesday Book of 1086,
Bernard the
Chamberlain held Harbridge...