用Norman造句子,“Norman”造句

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WHEN Norman Macrae died on June 11th, aged 89, no major British newspaper published an obituary of him.

If the world knows than Norman Osborn was the Green Goblin, would it make any sense for him to bother putting on the costume again?

Nim Chimpsky, to give him his full title, was born at the Institute for Primate Studies in Norman, Oklahoma, in the early 70s.

Heraldry has been a recurrent theme, the Black, White, Red and Golden Lions have formed part of the royal coat of arms since the time of the Norman Conquest.

This is the scalpel which Norman Bethune used in those days.

Read "How to Win Friends and Influence People," the classic by Norman Vincent Peale.

These most important events are The Anglos-Saxons' invasion; The Viking and Danish Invasions and The Norman Conquest.

The boy in the book is a real person named Norman Borlaug who grew up to win a Nobel Prize by hybridizing corn and wheat for arid climates.

"The idea that we could fertilize and irrigate our way out of this problem was the first Green Revolution" led by Nobel Peace Prize-winner Norman Borlaug and others, Lynch says.

“They talk male talk,” grumbled the late Norman Mailer, a novelist who thought liberals could be macho too.

East Germany released Alan Van Norman, a Minnesota man arrested while trying to smuggle an East German family to the West.

Norman造句

If alien words could kill, English might not have survived the Norman conquest.

Analyst Norman Ornstein says like this year, voters were in a sour mood in 1980 and looking for change, But unsure about putting Reagan in the White House.

After 1066, the Norman barons introduced surnames into England, and the practice gradually spread.

Earlier in the weekend, a former Republican presidential candidate, Alan Keyes, was taken into custody, as was an elderly priest, Fr Norman Weslin, who was carried away while singing Ave Maria.

Miss Ball, who is married to DJ Norman Cook, gave birth to her daughter by caesarean section in January.

But it is the six centuries of Anglo-Saxon rule, from shortly after the departure of the Roman colonizers, around A. D. 410, to the Norman Conquest in 1066, that most define what we now call England.

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