perambulation

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perambulation
perambulation (pəˌræmbjʊˈleɪʃən) [a. AF. perambulation, med.L. perambulātio (both in early use in England in sense 3), n. of action from perambulāre: see perambulate v. and -ation. Cf. It. perambulazione (Florio).] 1. The action of walking through; a walk, a journey on foot; formerly more generally,... Oxford English Dictionary
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Perambulation
Perambulation noun; is the act of walking around, surveying land, or touring. Perambulation may refer to: Beating the bounds, annual custom in England and Wales of walking the boundary of one's parish Perambulation in Massachusetts wikipedia.org
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perambulation
perambulation/pəˌrmbjuˈleɪʃn; pɚˌæmbjə`leʃən/ n[C, U] He saw many strange things during his perambulations in the old city. 他到那古老的城市里闲逛, 看见很多奇怪的事物. 牛津英汉双解词典
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Bristol perambulation
For instance, the newspaper reports of a perambulation in 1874 indicate that the perambulation of the land boundary took two days and involved about five That involved a perambulation of the water boundary. wikipedia.org
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Perambulation of the Town Leat
The Perambulation of the Town Leat is a traditional mediaeval custom, also known as water-bailing, that takes place in the town of Tiverton, Devon, England now involves negotiating walls, private gardens and making use of many paths that are not public rights of way, some of which must be cleared on each perambulation wikipedia.org
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Perambulator
Perambulator may refer to: Pram (baby), a type of baby transport Surveyor's wheel, a device for measuring distance See also Perambulation (disambiguation wikipedia.org
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perambulatory
▪ I. † peˈrambulatory, n. Obs. [f. L. perambulāre, -āt-: see prec. and -ory1. Cf. ambulatory.] a. A place for walking about in; a walk. b. ? A record of a perambulation (perambulation 3).1636 R. Brathwait Rom. Emp. 233 Curious walkes and perambulatories befitting so great a Majesties residence. 1773... Oxford English Dictionary
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David Hughson
He produced a description of the city based on "an actual perambulation" (walk) that was published in six volumes between 1805 and 1809 and contains 150 , to Thirty Miles Extent which he prepared from "an actual perambulation" (a real walk) of the city. wikipedia.org
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Purlieu
seems no doubt that purlieu or purley represents the Anglo-French pourallé lieu (old French , , to go through Latin ), a legal term meaning properly a perambulation wikipedia.org
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Samuel Rowe (antiquary)
Rowe published A Perambulation of Dartmoor in 1848 as a result of fieldwork carried out in 1827–28. The Perambulation was reprinted in 1856. It was thoroughly revised by his nephew, J. wikipedia.org
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巡行
【巡行】xúnxíng[perambulation;patrol;go on circuit] 往来视察 新华字典
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Dorothy Kilner
Her best known work was The Life and Perambulation of a Mouse (1784). Kilner's best-known book was The Life and Perambulation of a Mouse (1784). wikipedia.org
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Henry Ferrers (antiquary)
Works He was the earliest collector of materials for the history of his county, with the exception of John Rous, and he intended to publish a Perambulation of Warwickshire on the model of William Lambarde's Perambulation of Kent, but did not carry out the plan. wikipedia.org
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Beating the bounds
The Bristol perambulation involved a circuit of the county 'shirestones' each year. Current Vermont statutes make no reference to town boundary perambulation. wikipedia.org
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Kinver Forest
only be deduced from the places summoned to attend forest courts in the 13th century or which were declared disforested in whole or part in the Great Perambulation Under the Great Perambulation of 1300, the bounds were greatly reduced. wikipedia.org
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