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Topics related to "Under11 rugby Stow"

Stow Stow
Stow , city (1990 pop. 27,702), Summit co., NE Ohio, a suburb of Akron; settled 1802, inc. as a city 1960. Chiefly residential, it has some light industry.... Read more
Stowe Stowe
Stowe , resort town (1990 pop. 2,450), Lamoille co., N central Vt.; settled 1794, inc. 1896. It is surrounded by mountains, including Mt. Mansfield, Vermont's highest. Stowe is one of New England's largest ski resorts, and the surrounding area has many scenic attractions. In addition to tourism and... Read more
Calvin Ellis Stowe Calvin Ellis Stowe
Calvin Ellis Stowe , 1802-86, American educator, b. Natick, Mass., grad. Bowdoin College, 1824, and Andover Theological Seminary, 1828; husband of Harriet Beecher Stowe. He was professor of Greek (1831-33) at Dartmouth and of sacred literature (1833-50) at Lane Theological Seminary, Cincinnati, of... Read more
John Stow John Stow
John Stow 1525?-1605, English chronicler and antiquarian. He was a tailor in his youth, but after 1560 he came under the patronage of Archbishop Matthew Parker, whose Society of Antiquaries he joined, and began collecting historical documents and manuscripts. His edition of Chaucer appeared in... Read more
Lester Young Lester Young
Lester Young 1909–1959 Jazz musician Stern Lessons Engendered Young’s Spontaneity Spent Peak Performance Years With Basie Long, Stow Decline Towards De... Read more
quartermaster quartermaster
quartermaster, originally a petty officer appointed to assist the master of a ship and his mates in such duties as stowing the hold, coiling the cables, etc. It is now a term more generally applied to the senior helmsman who takes over when a ship is entering or leaving harbour. In the past he was... Read more
glut glut
glut. 1. A term used for a becket secured to the aft side of the heavier course sails on the centreline just above the reef-bands. The bunt jigger, or bunt whip, was hooked into the glut when the sail was nearly furled and used to roll it up into its stowed position. The sail is reinforced with a... Read more
trysail trysail
trysail, a small sail set for heavy weather in place of the normal sails, especially in small sailing craft. Originally a rectangular sail with its own gaff, which was used to replace a gaff-rigged mainsail, but currently a triangular sail usually set over the main boom when the mainsail has been... Read more
Topsy Topsy
Topsy name of the young slave girl in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852), who says of herself ‘I s'pect I growed. Don't think nobody never made me.’ From this, Topsy is taken as the type of something which seems to have grown of itself without anyone's intention or... Read more
victualler victualler
victualler, a merchant ship, during the days of sailing navies, taken up for naval use to carry victuals for a fleet when it was at sea for long periods. They were required because the ships had insufficient space on board to stow all the food needed. Once empty they were either sent home or broken... Read more

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