Similar words: saxon, los angeles, hearing loss, saxophone, anglophile, axon, saxophonist, taxon. Meaning: [‚æŋglə‚'sæksn] n. 1. a native or inhabitant of England prior to the Norman conquest 2. a person of Anglo-Saxon (especially British) descent whose native tongue is English and whose culture is strongly influenced by English culture as in WASP for `White Anglo-Saxon Protestant' 3. English prior to about 1100. adj. of or relating to the Anglo-Saxons or their language.
Random good picture Not show
1. The temple is Anglo-Saxon architecture.
2. Debilly had no Anglo-Saxon shyness about discussing money.
3. Anglo-Saxon probity is hardly seen as a virtue here.
4. Inside the church, the earliest feature is an Anglo-Saxon carved stone cross head which was found in the churchyard in 1934.
5. There is as it happens an Anglo-Saxon proverb analogous to Lord Acton's, but still significantly different.
6. The Anglo-Saxon and Norman kings employed the system, but during Plantagenet times it fell into desuetude.
7. Anglo-Saxon stories and poems were part of a largely oral culture.
8. In Anglo-Saxon times portions of the Bible had been translated from Latin into the vernacular.
9. The government remains overwhelmingly white Anglo-Saxon, as is the political culture.
10. The remains include parts of an Anglo-Saxon church, a Norman church and a medieval monastery.
11. The pagan Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are much easier to date because of the larger number of artefacts found in them as grave-goods.
12. The key was lineage; members of the Anglo-Saxon ascendancy stuck together.
13. The abhorrence of the profession is documented throughout Anglo-Saxon history.
14. Formerly, the Anglo-Saxon words were used to refer to both the meat and the animals.
15. a critical study that aims to cover such disparate forms as Anglo-Saxon poetry and the modern novel.
16. They always seem to live somewhere in the north as typified by this quotation from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
17. She need not be beautiful in the traditional sense of Anglo-Saxon beauty: tall, blond and willowy.
18. With the United States as its manager, it was an Anglo-Saxon rule-driven, legalistic system.
19. Ivory was certainly carried as far north as York during Anglo-Saxon times.
20. Theodore thereby gave a wholly new dimension to the authority of the archbishop of Canterbury within the Anglo-Saxon Church.
21. Still less was he interested in what he considered the barbarous traditions of the Anglo-Saxon Church which he found on his arrival.
22. Yet bows and arrows are very rare in early Anglo-Saxon graves.Sentencedict.com
23. The items range from huge Roman mosaic floors to delicate Anglo-Saxon gold rings and glass work.
24. Anything from Roman jugs and vases to intricate jewellry from the Anglo-Saxon era.
25. The former provides a remarkable education resource whilst conserving a very important Anglo-Saxon burial ground.
26. Whitby jet was widely used in Roman Britain, and jet beads occur commonly in Anglian cemeteries of the Anglo-Saxon period.
27. Recent work on Domesday and associated documents implies that late Anglo-Saxon government kept extensive written records.
28. Aside from the pottery itself, the evidence for the manufacture of early Anglo-Saxon pottery is sparse.
29. It must be seen against the social background of early Anglo-Saxon society in the seventh century.
30. He came out only two years ago, a move greeted by Gallic shrugs rather than Anglo-Saxon hysteria.
More similar words: saxon, los angeles, hearing loss, saxophone, anglophile, axon, saxophonist, taxon, klaxon, axoneme, taxonomy, taxonomic, taxonomist, taxonomically, sensorineural hearing loss, right-angled triangle, callosal, gloss, glossy, glossary, gloss over, glossitis, diglossia, glossiness, hypoglossal, glossophobia, vainglory, going long, gloatingly, hand in glove.