「castilian」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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In this process | Castilian absorbed many words from these languages, so |
re frame drum, similar to the Portuguese and | Castilian adufe. |
e and France as well as remove Isabella from | Castilian affairs. |
Eleonora's royal | Castilian ancestors and relations with the Habsburgs p |
On 1 September 1814, Tartarus, | Castilian and Avon recaptured the Atlantic. |
ince, it had a special statute that combined | Castilian and Navarrese rights. |
It was translated into | Castilian and the Limousin dialect (once thought to be |
ice), Hebrew (and from Hebrew into Russian), | Castilian and Latin. |
n translated into Spanish, by a professor of | Castilian, and is used in the primary school system in |
he province of Castile-La Mancha between the | Castilian and Leonese army of Alfonso VI and the Almor |
eing alone with a man, who, was, addition, a | Castilian, and, therefore, the enemy of his homeland. |
The army was almost completely | Castilian; Aragonese and foreign mercenary participati |
anguage forms having equal status to that of | Castilian are given after a slash mark (in accordance |
Aragon would become the first count of this | Castilian area soon thereafter. |
In 1086 the | Castilian army was destroyed in battle by the Almoravi |
The | Castilian army consisted of some 6000 men, mostly cava |
Of the | Castilian army, Andalusia contributed far more troops |
y in hope of taking the newcomer, the 18-gun | Castilian, as well. |
Eleanor of England (known in | Castilian as Leonor) (13 October 1162 - 31 October 121 |
suppress the regional languages in favour of | Castilian as the sole official language, causing a bac |
In | Castilian, atrevido carries the meaning of "daring" or |
The first | Castilian attacks met a decided resistance. |
Blues castillan [ | Castilian Blues]. |
However, the | Castilian Catholic King John II did not decisively sup |
In the short battle that followed, the | Castilian cavalry was unable to break the Portuguese f |
the East and contemplated marching, with his | Castilian chivalry, to restore the Latin Kingdom of Je |
part, and the two castles represent the two | Castilian communities and Madrid as their union. |
Tenerife prior to the | Castilian conquest. |
nt Muslim castle, later converted for use by | Castilian counts, which sits atop a hill that looks ov |
of Aragon, and succeeded him as King of the | Castilian Crown in 1390. |
The Coves Dels Hams ( | Castilian: Cuevas Dels Hams, English: "Fishhook Caves" |
In 1520, after the | Castilian deputies had demanded in vain Charles V's re |
s, ferms e sobeirans celebrates an anonymous | Castilian domna (lady). |
After the Lordship was inherited by the | Castilian dynasty in 1370, the Kings of Castile and la |
Her stern, gaunt | Castilian face loomed in many post-war Filipino films, |
onarch planned a naval offensive against the | Castilian fleet, anchored in Seville. |
Portions of it were also translated into | Castilian for the Gran Conquista de Ultramar, which al |
After the | Castilian forces defeated the Islamic insurgents, they |
breed was developed in England from imported | Castilian fowl of Spain. |
The Emirate's attack on the | Castilian frontier town of Zahara in December 1481 pro |
Spanish: San Fruitos, Frutos, Fructos) was a | Castilian hermit of the eighth century venerated as a |
The | Castilian horse has a balanced conformation, the lengt |
The | Castilian Horse is not a large horse, the very best sp |
The | Castilian Horse, or Caballo Castellano, is a finely ga |
haracteristic, the way of moving defines the | Castilian Horse. |
She was the last legitimate member of the | Castilian House of Burgundy. |
n effectively hereditary basis, by the great | Castilian houses of nobility. |
287 married Violante of Castile, daughter of | Castilian Infante Juan Manuel of Castile. |
The Moriscos were initially dispersed in the | Castilian interior, then expelled outright from Spain |
me Queen consort of Castile when she married | Castilian King Ferdinand IV. |
e, and her daughter Beatrice, married to the | Castilian King Juan I. Fernando's half-brother John, M |
n 1464, and he refused to pay tribute to the | Castilian king. |
ed enough information to seriously alarm the | Castilian king. |
The title is attributed to the | Castilian kings after 1332. |
He is variously known among | Castilian kings as the Avenger or the Implacable, and |
ohn of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, and the | Castilian Kings of Trastamara's house, faced for the t |
r control of southern Spain, Elvida, a noble | Castilian lady, has been captured by the Moors. |
Old toponymic | Castilian language forms are given in square brackets |
as the maestro de capilla (chapel master in | castilian language) at the cathedral in Seville. |
the first ten pages of Scholar Google Search | Castilian language, but I couldn't find a single artic |
lised antiquarian book-seller of Catalan and | Castilian language, Joan Gili. |
He and his uncle Munio were one of the first | Castilian magnates to support Alfonso VI after the dea |
Peire Vidal put it, he had preferred a poor | Castilian maid to the emperor Manuel's golden camel. |
ropean songs used as basis include Limerick, | Castilian Maid, Lord MacDonald's Reel, Voulez-vous Dan |
In 1485 at Venice a complete copy of the Old | Castilian manuscript was translated into Latin and pub |
Due to this geographic position, the | Castilian monarchs repopulated the town and maintained |
says that it might have been founded by the | Castilian monarchs as a hamlet in the reconquered terr |
ar, he took advantage of a secular custom of | Castilian monarchs to selectively promote lower class |
hen these territories depend directly on the | Castilian monarchs, later becoming the category of tow |
Its official | Castilian name is Villafranca del Cid. |
rdinand and Isabella to harness the restless | Castilian nobility against a common enemy and instill |
He participated in a revolt of the | Castilian nobles against the despotic rule of his brot |
tian force was made up of troops provided by | Castilian nobles, towns, and the Santa Hermandad, as w |
r his second wife Joanna (Juana) Enriquez, a | Castilian noblewoman (of a bastard cadet line from Cas |
n took for his second wife Juana Enriquez, a | Castilian noblewoman (of a bastard cadet line from Cas |
She was a | Castilian noblewoman. |
y-year period, Linehan shows how events in a | Castilian nunnery could influence high politics in the |
rom the Atheneo, include sermons preached in | Castilian on various Saints' festival days; his other |
The climate is the typical | Castilian one. |
panish words are written in an early form of | Castilian or in a related dialect. |
His surname is of | Castilian origin, and maybe he was born to Castilian i |
The | Castilian people (Spanish: castellanos) are the inhabi |
ng the Pisuerga's course across the northern | Castilian plain. |
re of the sea breezes and the dry air of the | Castilian plain. |
known as Juan Poeta ("John the poet"), was a | Castilian poet. |
Dutch, German, Icelandic, English, Catalan, | Castilian, Portuguese, French, Italian and Welsh. |
the Compromise of Caspe in 1412, elected the | Castilian prince Ferdinand of Antequera as King Ferdin |
Ortiz came to Portugal in 1476, accompanying | Castilian Princess Joanna La Beltraneja. |
Jewish convert, John traveled throughout the | Castilian provinces and lectured and debated in the sy |
e Black Prince, and an escort of English and | Castilian retainers and London dignitaries. |
The rope(string) that I use average 50 | Castilian rods. |
anuel of Castile, from a cadet branch of the | Castilian royal house. |
Isabel was descended from English and | Castilian royalty, as well as several major English ar |
not until late in the fifteenth century that | Castilian sailors began to compete with their Iberian |
the Paseo de la Castellana (Promenade of the | Castilian) side there is a monument to Columbus built |
ncia arbitral, "sentence by arbitration," in | Castilian), signed in Zaragoza in 1304, settled the qu |
nderwent linguistic substitution by Spanish ( | Castilian) similar to in the Valencian comarca Vega Ba |
and language, including those traditionally | Castilian, since his kingdom reached from Galicia to t |
f specific information in order to teach the | Castilian society the proper behaviors of courtiers. |
ected to great suffering at the hands of the | Castilian soldiery, having their shops plundered and t |
French tradition, and was originator of the | Castilian Sonnet. |
Today the principal language is | Castilian Spanish with some Valencian words. |
received the name of the lighthouse, and in | Castilian Spanish evolved into the name 'Haro'. |
a and Galicia, the Salve Marinera has only a | Castilian Spanish version; it does not exist in any of |
names to reflect local languages other than | Castilian Spanish and three to match the name of a cot |
languages including: US English, UK English, | Castilian Spanish, Mexican Spanish, French, Canadian F |
onsine tables were originally written in the | Castilian Spanish. |
e la Iglesia street, all designed in the old | Castilian style. |
of Castile initiating a four-year War of the | Castilian Succession. |
Tunisia in 1428 or 1429, with the promise of | Castilian support in overthrowing Muhammad VIII. |
Tunisia in 1428 or 1429, with the promise of | Castilian support in overthrowing Muhammed VIII. |
She ascended the | Castilian throne as Princess of Asturias in 1502 and s |
a son of Edward III of England, to claim the | Castilian throne in right of his second wife, Peter's |
os was recognized in 1560 as the heir to the | Castilian throne, and three years later as heir to the |
s to belong to the official successor of the | Castilian throne. |
The only surviving manuscript of the Old | Castilian translation is MS 3605 at the National Libra |
overning by proxy on behalf of this kingdom; | Castilian troops often raided the area to assert a sov |
The victorious advance of the | Castilian troops for Tortosa, Cambrils, Tarragona, and |
n 1935 and 1940 - " The book starts off in a | Castilian village and ends up in Paris, but its essent |
Its signature gait, the Paso Castellano (' | Castilian Walk'), is a broken pace that begins with th |
re was a crucial defeat of the rebels in the | Castilian War of the Communities in 1521, the Battle o |
) was a leader of the rebel Comuneros in the | Castilian War of the Communities. |
He took part in the | Castilian War of the Communities, and he was a leader |
As | Castilian was the language of the Crown, it became the |
Mendoza, a | Castilian, was not well-received, and he provoked the |
The name "Parrina" may originate from the | Castilian word for a pergola on which vines or figs ar |
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