「Ouse」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| h carries the Ipswich line over the River Great | Ouse a mile south of Ely. |
| It lies on the eastern side of the River | Ouse about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of York. |
| s a village and civil parish on the River Great | Ouse about 3.5 miles (5.6 km) north-east of Buckingh |
| is located on the west side of the River Great | Ouse, about 2 km from the river and from the town of |
| y of the Mole, Medway, Stour, Rother, Cuckmere, | Ouse, Adur and Arun. |
| e Victoria Tunnel where the tidal nature of the | Ouse allowed Wherries, the local barges, to be loade |
| r-cooled, using the water from the nearby River | Ouse, and biomass fuel will be transferred to the si |
| of Kingsbrook are approximately the River Great | Ouse and Priory Country Park to the north, Cambridge |
| bridgeshire, along the banks of the River Great | Ouse, and have been designated a Site of Special Sci |
| cientific Interest (SSSI) adjacent to the River | Ouse and approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Yor |
| The Ainsty, between the rivers Wharfe, Nidd and | Ouse, and passes through the towns of Boston Spa, We |
| s in the City of York to the north of the River | Ouse, and the Diocese of Leeds, covering the West Ri |
| kg) bomb and finished off by the destroyer HMS | Ouse, and damaged four others. |
| Ouse and Derwent is marked 1. | |
| wooded park, near the confluence of the rivers | Ouse and Wharfe. |
| It is situated on the | Ouse and 7 miles (11 km) north west of York. |
| itself, the Black Horse public house, the River | Ouse and the nearby caravan park. |
| the A1123, west of the A10, north of the River | Ouse, and east of the B1049 Twenty Pence Road. |
| Begwary Brook is adjacent to the River Great | Ouse, and is managed as a nature reserve by the Wild |
| The land borders the River | Ouse and is also home to birds such as mallards, mut |
| alls is the name of the confluence of the River | Ouse and the River Trent which forms the Humber in Y |
| Ouse and Derwent was a wapentake of the historic Eas | |
| Vale of York is drained southwards by the River | Ouse and its tributaries, the Ure, the Nidd and the |
| the Humber, on the north bank, where the River | Ouse and the River Trent meet. |
| e Stillingfleet (on the other side of the River | Ouse) and Appleton Roebuck. |
| dge that spans a mill stream on the River Great | Ouse and is, as the name suggests, built in an osten |
| It is on the River | Ouse and is the official residence of the Archbishop |
| e in the improvement of navigation on the River | Ouse and in the redevelopment of Newhaven Harbour. |
| Falls where the River Trent meets the Yorkshire | Ouse and becomes the Humber. |
| The River | Ouse, and therefore the canal, were not nationalised |
| ks of the River Ouzel, a tributary of the Great | Ouse and on the other side of Brickhill Street from |
| arly in the 6th century worked their way up the | Ouse and the Cam as far as Huntingdon. |
| er are more southerly contributors to the River | Ouse and the most southerly Yorkshire tributary is t |
| village is on the north bank of the River Great | Ouse, and is the site of an ancient bridge, linking |
| is situated on the east bank of the River Great | Ouse, and is the site of Milton Ernest Hall, which w |
| asmania in towns such as Bothwell, Hamilton and | Ouse, and until 1894 included much of the West Coast |
| It is situated just to the north of the River | Ouse, approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) east of Goole. |
| the remains of an old windmill and on the River | Ouse are the buildings of what used to be a working |
| nance-free steel was built over the River Great | Ouse as a replacement for a previous long-standing 2 |
| essively as a bridging point of the River Great | Ouse, as a market town, and in the 18th and 19th cen |
| the Fen Rivers Way down the course of the Great | Ouse as far as the Wash, or alternatively we can fol |
| and south of England) until it joins the River | Ouse at Trent Falls to form the Humber Estuary, whic |
| The River Aire empties into the River | Ouse at Airmyn, 'myn' being an old English word for |
| iver Derwent, eventually flowing into the River | Ouse at Barmby on the Marsh. |
| is known to have taken place on the River Great | Ouse at what is now Bedford. |
| rth, Bardwell, and Fakenham Magna to the Little | Ouse at Euston and is still known as the Black Bourn |
| ucted by the Romans, and joined the River Great | Ouse at Prickwillow until 1830. |
| he latter giving the Nar its name), joining the | Ouse at King's Lynn. |
| certainly have provided an observatory over the | Ouse basin, of defensive importance, and a beacon to |
| y, situated on the east bank of the River Great | Ouse between Saint Neots and Huntingdon in west Camb |
| Ouse bridge on York bypass | |
| The station was renamed | Ouse Bridge in April 1854, and closed on 1 January 1 |
| Ouse Bridge railway station was a railway station in | |
| The problems with the | Ouse Bridge pushed the opening of the whole section |
| nock Castle, Tempsford villagers and the Ivel & | Ouse Countryide Project volunteers. |
| village, the course heads down the River Great | Ouse, crosses over to the Kempston side heading towa |
| AM/MW (West Lynn, near the A47 and River Great | Ouse), DAB and through the internet using BBC iPlaye |
| made national headlines in August 2006 when the | Ouse District Hospital, originally established as a |
| Ouse District High School is a public school which c | |
| Trent and all of its tributaries, and the River | Ouse draining a major part of Yorkshire, England, an |
| The north-eastern boundary is formed by the | Ouse Dyke, separating Netherfield from the parish of |
| om the Marshland bird hide, with a ship, on the | Ouse, en route to Goole, in the background. |
| ons, one to prevent flood waters from the Great | Ouse entering the lode, and the other to raise the w |
| n closed, it prevents floodwater from the River | Ouse flowing up the Foss and flooding parts of York. |
| Its northern boundary is the Little | Ouse forming the border with Norfolk, and the River |
| The River | Ouse forms the border of the parish with the Harroga |
| essary, to control the level of the River Great | Ouse from Earith southwards, with the excess water f |
| ory of the market town of St Neots on the River | Ouse, from prehistoric times onwards. |
| cecourse between the railway line and the River | Ouse from the late 1920s to the early 1940s |
| ome way to explaining how the little tributary ' | Ouse Gill Beck' which enters at Linton-on-Ouse usurp |
| Both the River Waveney and the River Little | Ouse have their sources at Redgrave Fen. |
| The work carried out by the Little | Ouse Headwaters Project has helped to reverse these |
| The Little | Ouse Headwaters Project (LOHP) was set up in 2002 by |
| bleak location on the banks of the River Great | Ouse, however there is no known record for this. |
| Eaton Socon Castle stood beside the River | Ouse in the village of Eaton Socon, which was origin |
| sed 'Act for building a Bridge across the River | Ouse, in the City of York .. and for widening, alter |
| e cut-off or by-pass channel of the River Great | Ouse in the Fens of Cambridgeshire, England. |
| il, Virginia Woolf drowned herself in the River | Ouse in 1941. |
| South Bank is an area to the south of the River | Ouse in York. |
| around Rockland All Saints and joins the Little | Ouse in Thetford. |
| The River Nidd is a tributary of the River | Ouse in the English county of North Yorkshire. |
| Tributaries entering the Great | Ouse in the town are the River Kym, Hen Brook, Duloe |
| village and civil parish beside the River Great | Ouse in the Aylesbury Vale district of Buckinghamshi |
| Over is a large village near the River Great | Ouse in the English county of Cambridgeshire, just e |
| Modern Ely cathedral with the river Great | Ouse in the foreground; though most of the Fenland w |
| e flood barrier then onto the bank of the River | Ouse into York to meet the Foss Walk at the footbrid |
| The River Great | Ouse is on the left. |
| The | Ouse is the name given to the river after its conflu |
| Ouse is a small town in the Central Highlands Counci | |
| The River | Ouse lies to the east. |
| s of the East Suffolk and Norfolk, Essex, Great | Ouse, Lincolnshire and Welland and Nene River Author |
| -acre (0.80 km2) reservoir that feeds the River | Ouse located in West Sussex, England 5 miles (8 km) |
| It joins the Great | Ouse near Tempsford. |
| Swans nesting beside the Great | Ouse near St Neots |
| The sword was found in the River | Ouse near Cawood in North Yorkshire in the late 19th |
| ch means 'camp on the Tove') before meeting the | Ouse near Milton Keynes. |
| The Bridge over the River Great | Ouse, north-east of the village |
| It lies 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of the River | Ouse, not far from where it flows into the River Tre |
| t of Hull, and as the strong point on the River | Ouse of immense strategic importance in the movement |
| hetford Forest on a meander of the River Little | Ouse on the Norfolk-Suffolk border. |
| ted to the south of Lewes and west of the River | Ouse on a flood plain, and contains many invertebrat |
| The area is on the southern bank of the | Ouse, opposite the village of Blacktoft. |
| as situated on the west bank of the River Great | Ouse, opposite the town of King's Lynn, and comprise |
| ecomes navigable, changes its name to the River | Ouse, passes through York, becomes the Humber estuar |
| d Seaford (separated from Newhaven by the River | Ouse, population 22,000). |
| e first bridge here there was a ford across the | Ouse, probably dating back several thousand years. |
| Tributaries of the River | Ouse provided some assistance in the building of now |
| Drax | Ouse Renewable Energy Plant is one of the three prop |
| The Drax | Ouse Renewable Energy Plant is predicted to result i |
| A site of the Drax | Ouse Renewable Energy Plant adjacent to the current |
| positions overlooking the rivers Arun, Adur and | Ouse respectively, while those at Chichester, Hastin |
| These comprise River Glen, Great | Ouse, River Nene, and River Welland. |
| dle and is one of the tributaries of the Little | Ouse river which eventually joins the Great Ouse and |
| ks needed for its construction travelled up the | Ouse River (via Newhaven and Lewes) from Holland. |
| Thetford, an important crossing of the Little | Ouse River, draws its name from the Anglo-Saxon Theo |
| a 200-acre (0.81 km2) Country park on the Great | Ouse River, located near the village of Emberton, ne |
| The River Great | Ouse runs alongside. |
| e mooring points in the lock basin on the River | Ouse side with overnight mooring on the River Foss p |
| rls' boarding school), to the east of the River | Ouse, some 4 miles (6 km) northeast of Buckingham. |
| Ouse: source near Lower Beeding; mouth at Newhaven | |
| It lies on the south bank of the River Great | Ouse, south of the larger town of Huntingdon, and on |
| lley is still accessible via a WWII entrance on | Ouse Street. |
| The village is to the west of the River | Ouse, Sussex and has a church dedicated to Saint Pet |
| The most northerly of the rivers in the | Ouse system is the Swale, which drains Swaledale bef |
| of the School, closer to the banks of the River | Ouse than the senior school which runs along the mai |
| spring that is the official source of the River | Ouse that eventually exits into the sea at Newhaven. |
| ave for the extreme west beyond the River Great | Ouse that is part of the diocese of Ely. |
| tween two diversion channels of the River Great | Ouse: the Old Bedford River and the New Bedford Rive |
| Before bridges spanned the | Ouse, the Stock Ferry was the usual way of crossing. |
| At its junction with the Great | Ouse, the channel is crossed by the A10 road, which |
| Wells to Uckfield, and thence follows the River | Ouse to its mouth at Newhaven, bypassing Lewes by me |
| rom the Midland quarries shipped down the River | Ouse to Bedford and from there conveyed by horse and |
| Looking north across the River | Ouse to Newton-on-Ouse |
| There are several bridges across the Great | Ouse to Huntingdon, but until 1975 Old Bridge, Hunti |
| t is situated along the south bank of the River | Ouse to the east of the town of Goole, covering an a |
| empston North are approximately the River Great | Ouse to the north west, with Kempston High Steet and |
| rs Way, are the River Cam and shortly the Great | Ouse to just below the historic city of Ely, with it |
| ships and they sailed together along the River | Ouse towards the city of York. |
| iver Wharfe, which drains Wharfedale, joins the | Ouse upstream of Cawood. |
| wers in Sussex, all of which are located in the | Ouse Valley and all three built in the first half of |
| The Sussex | Ouse Valley Way is a 42-mile long-distance footpath |
| A small section of the | Ouse Valley Way is used on the Pathfinder March. |
| For the path in the East of England, see | Ouse Valley Way. |
| The | Ouse Valley Way is a 150-mile footpath in England, f |
| The Bedfordshire Reunion Brass Band play at | Ouse Valley Sounds at breaks in the contest, such as |
| ies on the River Til which feeds into the Great | Ouse valley and is about 70m above sea level. |
| Campaign group Defenders of the | Ouse Valley and Estuary claimed that more than 11,00 |
| St John's Church is one of three in the | Ouse Valley with a round Norman tower, the others be |
| essitated the long tunnel near Balcombe and the | Ouse Valley Viaduct. |
| The parish of Tarring Neville lies within the | Ouse Valley and Ringmer ward of Lewes District Counc |
| Built in 1841, the | Ouse Valley Viaduct (also called Balcombe Viaduct) o |
| 65 metres above mean sea level, is close to the | Ouse Valley and its flood plain. |
| rnment, for which Tarring Neville is within the | Ouse Valley East division, with responsibility for E |
| nt, for which Falmer is within the Newhaven and | Ouse Valley West division, with responsibility for E |
| etween 65 metres and 75 metres, overlooking the | Ouse Valley. |
| he line, and was built in 1838 across the River | Ouse valley. |
| Lewes Brooks is where the Falmer-Glynde and the | Ouse valleys meet. |
| The Great | Ouse was then diverted, and its old course occupied |
| The | Ouse was navigable for small boats from Lewes up to |
| It has been suggested that the ' | Ouse' was once all known as the 'Ure', but there see |
| Second World War the course of the River Little | Ouse was over-deepened which led to the drying-out o |
| The | Ouse Washes are an area in the Fens of Cambridgeshir |
| RSPB | Ouse Washes is a nature reserve, managed by the Roya |
| tion and RSPB Welches Dam nature reserve on the | Ouse Washes. |
| wards to Goole, where water levels in the River | Ouse were between 5 and 10 feet (1.5 and 3.0 m) lowe |
| n 1982 the two York parishes south of the River | Ouse were ceded to the Diocese of Middlesbrough to u |
| he banks of the Ouzel, a tributary of the Great | Ouse, where there a disused balancing lake has becom |
| he parish's northern border is the River Little | Ouse, which marks the boundary between Norfolk and S |
| its wildlife reservations that border the River | Ouse which flows along its western border. |
| It is just north of the River Great | Ouse, which forms the boundary with Buckinghamshire, |
| for a large area on the west bank of the Great | Ouse, while at Great Paxton on the east bank, anothe |
| icklegate lies on the Western side of the River | Ouse, Yorkshire, and holds the southern entrance int |
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