They have indeed, and you have your link - please proceed to explore the bumpier bits of the landscape (here and abroad)!
Alphabet associations - I
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Northender
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amateur51
H is for Hills
Bax In the Faery Hills
Oakley and Darwall Hills of the North
Fain and Webster Black Hills of Dakota
Weatherly and Coats The Green Hills o’ Somerset if it’s Coates
Robson The Cheviot Hills
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostH is for Hills
Bax In the Faery Hills
Oakley and Darwall Hills of the North
Fain and Webster Black Hills of Dakota
Weatherly and Coats The Green Hills o’ Somerset if it’s Coates
Robson The Cheviot Hills"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Northender View PostThey have indeed, and you have your link - please proceed to explore the bumpier bits of the landscape (here and abroad)!
Darwall's 148th was 'Hills of the North rejoice'
Bax's 'Faery Hills'
Weatherly and Coat(e)s 'Green Hills of Somerset'
But I'm too slow with Ammy in full blaze!
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Northender
Ammy - you have indeed conquered all 5 Hills, and provided all the relevant details. Please proceed to 'I'.
(Cloughie - Coats, as in threads, had nothing to do with Eric Coates, whose father was a doctor).
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amateur51
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Originally posted by Northender View PostAmmy - you have indeed conquered all 5 Hills, and provided all the relevant details. Please proceed to 'I'.
(Cloughie - Coats, as in threads, had nothing to do with Eric Coates, whose father was a doctor).
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amateur51
Nearly three hours gone & nary a nibble ....
The I is a forename in the first two, and a family name in the third.
There's a modest element of deception in each
All three are musical.
That'll do for now. I'll be sloping off by 20:30
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amateur51
Oh dear, no nibbles at all!
For a fresh day ...
What about if I tell you that Esplerando is the nickname of a soloist on an upright stringed instrument?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostOh dear, no nibbles at all!
For a fresh day ...
What about if I tell you that Esplerando is the nickname of a soloist on an upright stringed instrument?
Just think: this time last year, AA closed entirely for a month and a half... Someone'll mosey along by-and-by for a chomp..."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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can't find an online dictionary which thinks that either esplenderoso or esplerando are real words, which makes them difficult to translate
upright strings - cello or bass I guess
wikipedia says there are four songs and one jazz band called The Thing
can't be many I words that can serve as both fore and sur-names
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amateur51
Originally posted by mercia View Postcan't find an online dictionary which thinks that either esplenderoso or esplerando are real words, which makes them difficult to translate
upright strings - cello or bass I guess
wikipedia says there are four songs and one jazz band called The Thing
can't be many I words that can serve as both fore and sur-names
Think of an upright piano, mercs
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Northender
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