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13 Sentences With "linns"

How to use linns in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "linns" and check conjugation/comparative form for "linns". Mastering all the usages of "linns" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And yeah, I think she was just like the ... There's a sociologist couple named Robert Linns, who were sort of studying trends in America.
Ireland in the late ninth-century; the Viking settlements of Linns, Dublin, Wexford, Waterford, Cork and Limerick are marked The earliest recorded Viking raids in Ireland occurred in 795.
They had acquired a lot of Chinese household furniture during a trip to China in 1922, and this likely influenced their choice of interior design. They lived in the house until 1950, when Mrs. Linn died. The Nordykes, who were friends of the Linns, bought the house in 1960.
First 1853 issue 1912 stamp of Bernardo O'Higgins Chile has produced stamps for national use since 1853. The first stamps of Chile were inscribed Colon Chile. In 1894, Chile was one of the few countries to issue a stamp for the Avis de réception service.Challenge of acknowledgment of receipt stamps is use on cover by Janet Klug, linns.
A registered envelope for Kenya and Uganda from 1930. A registered envelope is a form of postal stationery consisting of a strong envelope with an imprinted stamp used for sending registered mail. The envelopes usually include a perpendicular blue cross and an R in a circle symbol, both internationally recognised symbols of registered mail.Postal stationery offers collecting variety by Rick Miller. Linns.
Bridge over the Talla Water near the Megget Stone Talla Water is a river in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, near Tweedsmuir. It feeds the Talla Reservoir, and is a tributary of the River Tweed. Above the reservoir are a series of waterfalls known as the Talla Linns. The Talla Railway was constructed to facilitate the building work, especially the Tweed Viaduct.
A viaduct carried the Stranraer-Glasgow railway over the Main Water of Luce. Down the river from the viaduct is a pool called Bloody Wheel where the Hays of Castle of Park, near Glenluce (Old Luce), and the Linns of Larg in the adjoining parish of Inch, were said to have had a violent encounter centuries ago.National Archives of Scotland GD72/142(i). 13 May 1662.
A study of the postmarks of Prague between 1850 and 1888. Marcophily, occasionally called Marcophilately, is the specialised study and collection of postmarks, cancellations and postal markings applied by hand or machine on mail that passes through a postal system and applied by the postal operator through whose domain they pass. Commatology was a term used prior to World War II but is rarely used today.Glossary Of Philatelic Terms (retrieved 25 February 2007) Linns.
Linn was the daughter of the theologian William Linn. The Linns were a literary family: Susan wrote fiction and poetry, her brother John Blair Linn was a poet, and her sister, Elizabeth, married Charles Brockden Brown, who wrote novels. De Witt owned a considerable amount of land in the Finger Lakes area, and held four slaves at his residence in Albany, New York, but by 1810 he had freed them, a common practice of the area. They continued to work in his household.
The Irish annals record the Gofraid left Ireland that year, along with a great many others from Dublin and Linns to claim Sitric's throne. During his absence it seems Gofraid delegated authority to his sons, thus (according to the Annals of Clonmacnoise) drawing the ire of the sons of Sitric. Sitric's sons allied with a "son of Helgi", probably Tomrair mac Ailchi of Limerick or a kinsman, and conquered Dublin, though this success was short-lived as Gofraid returned after only six months abroad.Downham, pp.
The ancient ballad from which the following story was derived has often been associated with the Linns or Lynns in Ayrshire but more likely was a tale of the Lynes who were Lords of Lyne in Peebles-shire. The ballad was collected and published by Thomas Percy in London in 1765 in his "Reliques of Ancient English Poetry: Consisting of Old Heroic Ballads, Songs, and Other Pieces of Our Earlier Poets" (Vol. II, pp. 309-18). There, Percy described the ballad as being "originally composed beyond the Tweed," understood to mean in the Scottish Borders.
Linn of Dee In Scotland and northern England a Linn is a geographical water feature, a watercourse that has cut through a shelf of hard rock creating a narrow (usually), steep-sided crevice (fracture) though which it runs. Typically one named after a river or area can have application even for more than one such feature. The photograph of the Linn of Dee illustrates the attributes of a typical 'Linn'. In Gordon (1925) the author describing a walk down Glen Avon in the Cairngorms mentions two Linns on the River Avon - first: Second: A linn may also refer to a waterfall or a pool at the foot of a waterfall,Free Dictionary.
Cachet-making is considered an art form, and cachets may be produced by using any number of methods, including drawing or painting directly onto the envelope, serigraphy, block printing, lithography, engraving, laser printing, attachment of photographs or other paper memorabilia, etc. Frequently flight cachets (which have also been used in space and on the moon) are rubber- stamped. The largest and best-known cachet-making companies, which typically produce thousands or tens of thousands of printed cachets for U.S. stamp issues, are ArtCraft (1939-2015),"Demise of ArtCraft first-day covers reflected various market challenges". by Lloyd De Vries, Linns Stamp News (retrieved 30 January 2019) Artmaster, Fleetwood, House of Farnam, and Colorano.

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