- history: The
Naval Crown superscribed "1st June 1794" – from the Queen's
Royal Regiment (West Surrey) The
Sphinx superscribed "Egypt 1801" – from the Queen's...
-
retroflex consonants, and the ya-tags
became palatals.
Later on the
superscribed letters and
finals d and s disappeared,
except in the east and west....
-
Lancashire Fusiliers 20th (East Devonshire)
Regiment of Foot 1881 The
sphinx superscribed Egypt within a
laurel wreath Primrose yellow (1901). The 20th Foot wore...
-
represented with ں, e.g., بُويْں buĩ 'smell' [in
these dialects]. The
superscribed element of the
letter ځ in
earlier varieties was not hamza-shaped, but...
- Scotland". The
Royal Scots.
Retrieved 15 June 2018. The
Sphinx badge superscribed "Egypt". "The
Royal Scots (The
Royal Regiment)". regiments.org. Archived...
- name of God" (which is the
orthodox fashion), the
Bengali Musalman will
superscribe the name of some
Hindu deity. He
speaks the same language, and uses precisely...
-
ensigned with a
Mural Crown all in Silver. The
Sphinx superscribed "Egypt". A
Mural Crown superscribed "Jellalabad" Gibraltar, 1704–5 –
Dettingen – St. Lucia...
-
between 1817 and 1910 in
denominations ranging from £1 to £100. In 1910,
superscribed banknotes were used as the Commonwealth's
first national paper currency...
- one
hundred cents. The
first national issue of
paper money (known as
Superscribed banknotes)
consisted of
overprinted notes from
fifteen private banks...
-
appointments the
figure of the "Royal Tiger," with the word "Hindoostan"
superscribed, as a
lasting testimony of the
exemplary conduct of the
Corps during...