Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
A large black belt surrounds his abdomen supporting a fauld and cloth loincloth.
Part of the garden outline survives on the Benslie Fauld farm side.
He wears a fauld on his abdomen, and bandages wrap around his stomach.
They hung from the fauld.
The name 'fauld' may hold a clue at this is Scots for an area manured by sheep, cattle or possibly deer.
A "fauld" was the poorer part of the village fields left fallow until manured by grazing sheep or cattle.
"Id was nod oor fauld dhe water sprayed oud.
Bounded by the hedge on the right and the rivulet on the left is the 'Dovecot Fauld'.
He found employment at D. P. Fauld's music store, where he continued to write music and poetry.
The ballad Sir James the Rose was set in Battle Fauld where he is supposedly buried.
Maybe because it bore the origins of modern forensic science, with Fauld's letter to Nature in 1880, proposing the use of fingerprints to identify criminals.
Kusazuri (fauld or tasset)
The local farms include Benslie Fauld, as well as North and South Millburn.
Fauld had sub-sites at Bagot's Wood, Flax Mill and nearby Hilton.
To the west of Rattray on the banks of Loch Strathbeg is the historical site Battle Fauld.
A tale is told of a visit by a local character, Daft Wull Speir, to Benslie Fauld.
An irregularly shaped raised area of ground runs down from near Benslie Fauld farm into the garden of Wood Neuk.
And now milord is gone, and he'll never come back, and it's all my fauld' Wailing now, he fell facedown on the ground at my feet.
RAF Fauld Explosion in 1944 was within the civil parish, one of the largest artificial non-nuclear explosions in the world to that date.
Green light armor covered his forearms and lower legs, while an open V-shaped green vest protected his torso, extending to a matching small fauld and loincloth.
Another blow to the underground stores came on 27 November 1944 when there was an explosion at Fauld involving approximately 4,000 tons of high explosive bombs killing seventy people.
The Scots term 'fauld' means a meadow which is manured by keeping animals on it; pigeon droppings from the nearby dovecot seem to have been used, at least in part, judging from its name.
In the early 1970s the site's capacity was expanded substantially, which allowed the closure of three other munitions bases in the West Midlands (Bramshall, Ditton Priors and RAF Fauld) in 1973.
In the summer of 1936 the RAF acquired a quarry at Chilmark in Wiltshire for its southern depot and an alabaster mine at Fauld in Staffordshire for its northern depot.
Calf Fauld burn flows into the Dunton water at Dunton Cove, this water flows from Craigendunton Reservoir and joins the head water of the Craufurdland Water near Waterside.