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  1. 281

    Final but, theticality and subjectification by Sylvie Hancil

    Published 2017-03-01
    “…The purpose of this article is to provide a synchronic study of final but in Southern and Northern British English by examining the spoken demographic section of the British National Corpus and the spoken section of the Scottish Corpus of Texts and Speech. Relying on the five criteria that define the category of theticals, it is shown that final but can be classified as a thetical with a schematic structure. …”
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  2. 282

    L’influence des Églises sur le processus de dévolution en Écosse by Edwige Camp

    Published 2011-04-01
    “…The two main Christian Churches in Scotland, the Presbyterian Church and the Catholic Church, each sent representatives to the Constitutional Convention which produced the recommendations serving as the basis for the devolved institutions set up in 1999 (Parliament and Executive). Since then, the Scottish Churches have been acting as pressure groups on the new institutions. …”
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  3. 283

    Heat Recovery Potential and Hydrochemistry of Mine Water Discharges From Scotland’s Coalfields by David B. Walls, David Banks, Tatyana Peshkur, Adrian J. Boyce, Neil M. Burnside

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…Untreated gravity discharges contribute 595 kg/day of iron to Scottish watercourses; thus, it is recommended that when treatment schemes for mine water discharges are constructed, they are co-designed with mine water geothermal heat networks.…”
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  4. 284

    Obhajoba oprávněného vzdoru vůči svrchovaným vládcům v díle Christophera Goodmana by Miroslav Beneš

    Published 2020-12-01
    “… Christopher Goodman was a famous English 16th century reformer, a colleague and a close friend of John Knox, Father of Scottish Presbyterian Church. Christopher Goodman was well-known thanks to his critical work ’How Superior Powers Ought to Be Obeyed by Their Subjects and Wherein They May Lawfully by God’s Word Be Disobeyed and Resisted’. …”
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  5. 285

    Related Strategies to Promote Gastronomy in Geographically Disadvantaged Areas by Maria del Pilar Leal Londoño

    Published 2015-11-01
    “…The present article analyzes State and local level tourism-related strategies to promote traditional cuisine in two geographically disadvantaged areas : two districts in the Catalonian Pyrenees, and two Scottish islands. The article is developed on the basis of a literature review and seven interviews given to a variety of stakeholders involved in the strategies. …”
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  6. 286

    De la campagne écossaise aux milieux aristocratiques londoniens : le déracinement de Thomas Carlyle? by Catherine Heyrendt

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…Despite his humble Scottish background, and the rigid Victorian social hierarchy, Thomas Carlyle was able to « write his way up » in the world, and was eventually invited into the highest London circles. …”
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  7. 287

    Nemo me impune lacessit or Ne obliviscaris? The Highlander Soldier in British Parliamentary Debates (18th-21st centuries) by Pierre-Louis Coudray

    Published 2023-10-01
    “…This article draws on Cobbett’s Parliamentary History of England,2 official transcripts of parliamentary debates provided by British History Online3 and Hansard4, as well as on press articles, in order to demonstrate that the Highlander soldier, whose uniform is instantly recognisable, was seen either as a threat to, or as a symbol of, British power and that he fitted in wider discussions on defence and Scottish identity.…”
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  10. 290

    Robert Owen, James Buchanan et l’Infant School de New Lanark by Marie Vergnon

    Published 2013-10-01
    “…The history of infant education puts a lot of emphasis on the New Lanark Infant School and its founder, the Scottish reformer Robert Owen. Although Owen is commonly credited with the authorship of this school, one of his former teachers, named James Buchanan, contends with him for the original idea. …”
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  11. 291

    « Little grunts, the grins and grimaces of recognition »: Resistance and Exchange in Paul Muldoon and Norman MacBeath’s Plan B by Alexandra Tauvry

    Published 2014-06-01
    “…He recently published a book with Scottish photographer Norman McBeath entitled Plan B (2009). …”
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  12. 292

    Aux sources britanniques des salles d’asile françaises by Marie Vergnon

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…It is then appropriate to ask ourselves, by comparing what we know about Owen's Scottish infant school and the projects of the first organizers of collective education for young children in France, what may have traveled of the values and pedagogical projects defended by Owen into the French institutions. …”
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  13. 293

    « Parlez-vous franglais ? » La galimafrée des langues dans Henry V  by Jean-Michel Déprats

    Published 2022-01-01
    “…Translators have often resorted to regional dialects (such as Alsatian, Occitan variants, Breton language, Creole…) to render the Irish, Scottish and Welsh accents of Shakespeare’s Captains in the play. …”
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  14. 294

    La Donna del Lago de Rossini : première entrée en scène de Walter Scott dans l’opéra italien by Liliane Lascoux

    Published 2011-12-01
    “…His melodramma adapts Scott’s long poem The Lady of the Lake (1810), a true Scottish epic that describes King James V’s rivalry with both Borderers and Highlanders. …”
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    Plato scholars and their research in the collection of letters to Lewis Campbell (1830–1908) by Tomasz Mróz

    Published 2018-12-01
    “… The paper presents Lewis Campbell (1830–1908), his research on Plato, and the collection of letters sent to this Scottish scholar by: James Martineau (1805–1900), William Hepworth Thompson (1810–1886), Paul Shorey (1857–1934), Wincenty Lutosławski (1863–1954), Eduard Gottlob Zeller (1814–1908), Franz Susemihl (1826–1901), and Theodor Gomperz (1832–1912). …”
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  18. 298

    Just Who Was Wearing the Trousers in Victorian Britain? Violent Wives and Violent Women by Anne-Marie Kilday

    Published 2005-12-01
    “…Evidence from nineteenth century Scottish and English church and court records suggest that abusive behaviour by wives against their husbands was not uncommon, and indeed, more often than not, the violence meted out by these women was in a physical sense, more ‘damaging’ than that inflicted by their male counterparts.The intention of this paper therefore, is to examine—through a balanced gendered perspective—the ways in which domestic violence was carried out, the apparent reasons for this behaviour and the consequences of this type of aggressive activity for both offender and victim, regardless of sex.In doing this, it is hoped that the paper will shed new light on a traditionally one-sided argument.…”
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  19. 299

    Gender Revolution in a Malthusian Utopia: Harriet Martineau’s world of Garveloch by Catherine Heyrendt-Sherman

    Published 2019-06-01
    “…Two of the twenty-five tales featured take place in Garveloch, a remote Scottish island which provides the setting for a socio-demographic experiment. …”
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  20. 300

    Polysémie de HOW dans la King James Version by Mathilde Pinson

    Published 2009-01-01
    “…Finally, it will be shown that the causal value of how has not disappeared altogether from Present-Day English, contrary to what the Oxford English Dictionary indicates, and it will be hypothesized that the use of causal how in Scottish Vernacular English is related to that in the KJV.…”
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