Similar words: elizabeth i, abet, cognizable, abettor, recognizable, diabetes, abetment, alphabet. Meaning: n. 1. daughter of George VI who became the Queen of England and Northern Ireland in 1952 on the death of her father (1926-) 2. Queen of England from 1558 to 1603; daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn; she succeeded Mary I (who was a Catholic) and restored Protestantism to England; during her reign Mary Queen of Scots was executed and the Spanish Armada was defeated; her reign was marked by prosperity and literary genius (1533-1603).
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(121) By the time we had learned to sail, poor Elizabeth had sprung a rather serious leak.
(122) Excavated in 1, 239 days, the 26, 800-foot Elizabeth Tunnel set a record for hard-rock tunneling.
(123) Elizabeth Barrett Browning explained her own self-starvation in her verse novel Aurora Leigh.
(124) It made them alive, somehow, and Elizabeth longed to go inside.
(125) Spiegel said Elizabeth Dole bought the apartment more than 10 years ago for $ 150, 000.
(126) Elizabeth goes in mocking pursuit with the husband in this comedy of manners.
(127) Elizabeth Fry had to struggle hard to prove that women could be rehabilitated, hence the wonder at her achievements in Newgate.
(128) The fact is, Elizabeth Taylor is a plump woman who is exceptionally beautiful that way.
(129) In 1562 and again in 1566 the Privy Council urged Elizabeth in vain to marry and secure the succession.
(130) That Elizabeth Woodville submitted is therefore perhaps not very surprising.
(131) Elizabeth visited Ivy not long after the University of Leeds had given her an honorary doctorate, in May 1960.
(132) We had a live audience of one, Richard's wife, Elizabeth Taylor.
(133) After her own parents died and she was left destitute, Elizabeth had found her wandering the streets.
(134) Elizabeth Mowbray was delighted by the marked change in her daughter that followed Joan's arrival.
(135) My sister Elizabeth does a lot of charitable work in orphanages.
(136) Elizabeth tolerated Sarah's antics.
(137) Elizabeth and her children were kicked out of the Wartburg castle by the in-laws.
(138) Prince Henry, who's nine, is very a nice little boy, and his sister Elizabeth is beautiful.
(139) Thus, for Austen's heroine, Elizabeth Bennet, marriage was not just important, it was compulsory.
(140) It seemed to Elizabeth that it took people half an hour to greet each other each day.
(141) The other duty of the lord lieutenant under Elizabeth was the appointment of justices of the peace.
(142) This meant transforming Elizabeth into a type of divine principal whose sexuality was not directly addressed.
(143) She was the daughter of James Wood, plasterer, and his wife Elizabeth Stothard.
(144) The committee also criticised him for refusing to cooperate with the Standards Commissioner, Elizabeth Filkin.
(145) Elizabeth crept closer to snap a close-range shot of her friend's sand-flecked face.Sentencedict.com
(146) Elizabeth heaved a sigh of relief upon reaching Aumery Park Farm.
(147) Elizabeth: Vanilla ice cream made from the thickest cream, and hot chocolate fudge.
(148) Close to the tree was a shattered tumbler, which police believe Elizabeth used to try to defend herself.
(149) Elizabeth listened with rapture to everyday incidents of family life.
(150) Elizabeth Jarvis said it was like St Paul's Cathedral, miraculously saved while all around it lay in ruins.
More similar words: elizabeth i, abet, cognizable, abettor, recognizable, diabetes, abetment, alphabet, aid and abet, unrecognizable, alphabetical, alphabetically, lizard, labeling, utilization, realization, civilization, visualization, globalization, fertilization, stabilization, socialization, neutralization, centralization, specialization, generalization, naturalization, internalization, hospitalization, externalization.