「savannah」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| Aboard the U.S. Ships Levant, Portsmouth, and | Savannah, A Shoulder to the Wheel of Progress, and Fan |
| was assigned to the 45th Bombardment Group at | Savannah AAB, Georgia, then moving to Grenier Field, N |
| requipped with B-18 Bolos, deployed first to | Savannah AAB, Georgia to patrol southeast coast, then |
| ned to command the 90th Bombardment Squadron, | Savannah AAF, Georgia, promoted to major on March 15 a |
| It breeds in forest and | savannah across sub-Saharan Africa, usually near water |
| Savannah affiliation shared with Washington Senators | |
| of the International Ice Patrol, returning to | Savannah after July. |
| Lane McKenzie had left | Savannah after graduating from college to become a suc |
| cer complications at St. Joseph's Hospital in | Savannah, aged 69. |
| g letters to her seventeen-year-old daughter, | Savannah, Alexa is certain that her client, Luke Quent |
| The AF&N was leased then to the | Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway (SA&M) in 18 |
| In 1888, it changed its name to the | Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway. |
| ma Railway was formed in 1895 from the failed | Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway. |
| Florida Central and Peninsular Railroad; the | Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway; the Souther |
| The following year the line was leased to the | Savannah, Americus and Montgomery Railway (SA&M), who |
| Pireaus, Greece, America, along with Dale and | Savannah, anchored there on 23 January for a five day |
| Its two Atlantic seaports are the Port of | Savannah and the Port of Brunswick; its two inland por |
| change in Mobile was followed by exchanges in | Savannah and Memphis. |
| pen space and magnificent views of the Piarco | savannah and the nearby Northern mountain range. |
| years later the railroad was absorbed by the | Savannah and Western Railroad, a subsidiary of the Cen |
| The regiment saw action at the Siege of | Savannah and the Siege of Charleston. |
| He resumed the practice of law in | Savannah, and was elected as a Representative to the F |
| e of Germantown, Battle of Monmouth, Siege of | Savannah and the Siege of Charleston. |
| nown from only twenty locations consisting of | savannah and coastal forest in the East Cape. |
| It can also be found on | savannah and brushland. |
| 1979, the Silver Meteor was rerouted between | Savannah and Jacksonville over the former Atlantic Coa |
| Its natural habitats are moist | savannah and subtropical or tropical seasonally wet or |
| 16 serves as a hurricane evacuation route for | Savannah and other coastal areas. |
| George M. Horner and Michael Philip Usina of | Savannah and two steamers: Marie Celeste and Atlanta. |
| the Sea was actively engaged in the Siege of | Savannah, and then marched through the Carolinas on th |
| ion in the early 1960s, along with WVAN-TV in | Savannah and WJSP-TV in Columbus. |
| i, Florida by way of Tampa, Jacksonville, and | Savannah, and New York, New York by way of Columbia, R |
| turned to his country home,Hancock Hall, near | Savannah, and died there in June 1913. |
| His body was returned to | Savannah and buried in Bonaventure Cemetery. |
| After the war, he again returned to | Savannah and resumed his work in banking, and moved to |
| Jones died in | Savannah and was interred in Bonaventure Cemetery. |
| It may also occur in more open | savannah and along rivers. |
| Scott, he left the army, married a woman from | Savannah and settled in that city. |
| inneapolis, Cincinnati, Antwerp, Los Angeles, | Savannah, and St. Louis. |
| second-largest city on Georgia's coast, after | Savannah, and is the seat of government for Glynn Coun |
| Its typical habitat is open | savannah and grassland, where it grows terrestrially i |
| politician, John G. Kennedy, became Mayor of | Savannah and the city's Police Department hired its fi |
| Savannah and Harold also appear in All Grown Up! and a | |
| ubdivisions of Cloverdale and Liberty City in | Savannah and reassigning some of Windsor's white stude |
| e year, the C&W started out by purchasing the | Savannah and Memphis Railroad, which ran 66 miles (106 |
| Later that year it was merged into the | Savannah and Western Railroad. |
| Citizens of | Savannah and others may purchase interment rights in B |
| Route 64 and Tennessee State Route 15 east of | Savannah and west of Waynesboro. |
| krats, Beavers, Coyotes, Sprague's Pipits and | savannah and vesper sparrows. |
| rgest counties, Chatham and Richmond, home to | Savannah and Augusta respectively. |
| es about 20 miles (32 km) of trackage between | Savannah and Riceboro, Georgia, switching Interstate P |
| r the state, including the GMEA conference in | Savannah and JanFest at the University of Georgia. |
| He was raised in the Bethesda Orphan House at | Savannah, and educated in the school there. |
| featured subjects such as the Free Blacks in | Savannah and the History of Savannah's Beach Historic |
| is a parrot native to the tropical lowlands, | savannah, and swamplands of Venezuela, the Guianas, Bo |
| s) is found in southern Africa in dry, wooded | savannah and towns. |
| w Mountain, Peach Tree Creek and the siege of | Savannah; and they were present at the battles of Miss |
| mals and waste which it finds by soaring over | savannah and around human habitation, including waste |
| Big Ivy is located southeast of | Savannah and north of the Alabama border. |
| Washington, and some of its units remained in | Savannah and Louisiana until 1866. |
| nd an island in the river at the port city of | Savannah, and not about the boundary location. |
| ere she painted landscapes of the area around | Savannah and the African American culture in the early |
| switch to an all-news format as both WSVH in | Savannah and WSCI in Charleston provided the entire WJ |
| Sherman's Civil War march through Georgia to | Savannah, and skirmishes were fought in and around Cam |
| was merged with several other lines into the | Savannah and Western Railroad, a subsidiary of the Cen |
| Tsessebe live in | savannah and floodplains where they eat mainly grass. |
| ion in Florida in 1777 and 1778, the Siege of | Savannah and the Siege of Charleston. |
| saw action in Florida in 1777 at the Siege of | Savannah and in 1778 at the Siege of Charleston. |
| bia County, with mortgage centers in Augusta, | Savannah, and Athens. |
| rus, a veteran of Fort Moultrie, the siege of | Savannah, and the siege of Charleston in the American |
| Childers Hill is located south of | Savannah and west of the Tennessee River. |
| Walkertown is located immediately south of | Savannah and is served by Tennessee State Route 128 an |
| FM) on a broadcast tower in Pembroke, west of | Savannah and just north of Fort Stewart. |
| e then departed for Norfolk, via Key West and | Savannah, and arrived there on 21 August 1898 where sh |
| io station known as "Big 98" targeted towards | Savannah and Brunswick, Georgia. |
| 's tower was moved to Glynn County, closer to | Savannah and began broadcasting oldies as "Oldies 98.3 |
| Savannah ANGB at Savannah/Hilton Head International Ai | |
| He was born in the | Savannah area and made a career in the shipyard indust |
| ry, and other public functions throughout the | Savannah area during the school year, averaging severa |
| Effingham and Chatham counties in the Greater | Savannah Area (state of Georgia). |
| It was named after a politician from the | Savannah area of Georgia. |
| sident of the YMCA of the Coastal Empire; the | Savannah Area Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors; |
| Effingham and Chatham counties in the Greater | Savannah Area, Georgia. |
| TOC-TV as the first television station in the | Savannah area. |
| ort Wentworth on the west side of the Greater | Savannah Area. |
| "mahusu" from a short palm which grows in the | savannah areas of western Bandundu and Kasai provinces |
| Students during Treasure | Savannah- Armstrong Day of Service |
| the ship that brought her memorial statue to | Savannah arrived, he refused to accept payment because |
| Savannah arrives at the lab area and learns that the c | |
| Today, that building houses the | Savannah Arts Academy, the only public high school for |
| as founded in 1935 by Thomas Gamble, mayor of | Savannah, as Armstrong Junior College, the institiutio |
| hority's facilities and services by selecting | Savannah as the MECL2 service's first port of call on |
| s habitats include dry rocky deserts and open | savannah, as well as lowland forests in Somalia. |
| eor had shifted to the old ACL route north of | Savannah, as the abandonment of the SAL route north of |
| acquired Diocesan House on East Bay Street in | Savannah as the diocesan headquarters. |
| ear the southeastern, coastal Georgia city of | Savannah as a spur route of Interstate 16. |
| ormed in 1840 from the growing Christ Church, | Savannah, as part of a plan to increase Episcopal pres |
| s tower in the early '80s and began targeting | Savannah as Adult Contemporary WQLO "98.7 Lite FM". |
| overnments in Augusta and one royal regime in | Savannah at a time when it could hardly afford one gov |
| downtown Macon, at Interstate 75 to downtown | Savannah at Montgomery Street (Exit 167B). |
| t of Pembroke at U.S. 280/S.R. 30 and ends in | Savannah at I-16 exit 165 (37th Street). |
| 0/S.R. 30 in the Lanier community and ends in | Savannah at I-16 exit 165 (37th Street Connector). |
| r, his son Karma Auger on drums, his daughter | Savannah Auger on vocals, and Derek Frank on bass. |
| in 1917, is an historic house located at 332 | Savannah Avenue in Statesboro, Georgia in the United S |
| Dr. Buzzard's Original | Savannah Band Goes to Washington is the third album by |
| Dr. Buzzard's Original | Savannah Band Meets King Penett is the second album by |
| Dr. Buzzard's Original | Savannah Band is the debut album by disco group Dr. Bu |
| o a percussionist with Dr. Buzzard's Original | Savannah Band. |
| wder Jr under the name Dr. Buzzard's Original | Savannah Band. |
| In 1861, Moxley left his job as a | Savannah bank clerk, taking part in the Confederate ca |
| Robert E. James, a | Savannah banker, reestablished the paper in 1973 and s |
| Christabel was sold at the end of June to the | Savannah Bar Pilots Association, of Savannah, Georgia |
| in turn part of the much larger Tennessee and | Savannah basins) to the west and east, respectively. |
| After the Revolution, New | Savannah became a tobacco inspection. |
| From there he moved to | Savannah becoming the Founding Pastor of the Crossroad |
| Construction of a fort to protect the port of | Savannah began in 1829 under the direction of Major Ge |
| Waving Girl Landing - connection to the | Savannah Belles ferry to Hutchinson Island |
| y the Continental Congress and constructed in | Savannah between 1776 and 1777. |
| This is a | savannah bird, which requires trees with old woodpecke |
| Savannah Blues is her follow up novel and is about An | |
| He was a member of the | Savannah board of aldermen in 1793-1794, 1802-1803, an |
| In addition to Sherry and | Savannah, Boucher had a third and youngest daughter, J |
| 2 to 1950, Gilbert served as president of the | Savannah Branch of the National Association for the Ad |
| a 12-4 victory, on April 26, 1978 against the | Savannah Braves in front of a sellout crowd of 8,156 f |
| The | Savannah Braves, were a baseball team that existed fro |
| na, blueback herring were introduced into the | Savannah, Broad, and Yadkin drainages, and into nonnat |
| The African | Savannah building is home to hippos, giraffes, Red Riv |
| They continue courses in | Savannah but graduate with a Georgia Tech Engineering |
| cky Dent, New York Yankees shortstop (born in | Savannah) but spent his early years in Sylvania |
| in the old cemetery on South Broad Street in | Savannah, but no gravestone could be found, and there |
| Katie Scarlett (goes by Scarlett), Drew, and | Savannah Butler. |
| army commanded by William T. Sherman captured | Savannah by land in December 1864, it took Fort Jackso |
| After repulsing a siege and assault on | Savannah by a combined Franco-American force in Octobe |
| The Port of | Savannah, by far the largest, is the flagship port. |
| , Lessard was appointed the twelfth Bishop of | Savannah by Pope Paul VI. |
| n 1782 hundreds of blacks were evacuated from | Savannah by the British, who transported many to Nova |
| Then as now, it was linked to downtown | Savannah by White Bluff Road, the 19th-century extensi |
| the late Francis Xavier Gartland as Bishop of | Savannah by Pope Pius IX. |
| Sherman's | Savannah Campaign is more popularly known as the March |
| The | Savannah campus offers undergraduate (B.S.) and gradua |
| The | Savannah campuses are located on White Bluff Road (mai |
| kie league Johnson City Cardinals and Class-A | Savannah Cardinals in 1991, and his last with the Chic |
| Formerly known as the | Savannah Cardinals, the team played their inaugural se |
| He is buried in | Savannah Cemetery Savannah, Tennessee. |
| He was interred in | Savannah Cemetery. |
| Savannah Center District | |
| He also played for the | Savannah Chain summer team. |
| mpany entered a large engined roadster in the | Savannah Challenge Cup Race held in Savannah, Georgia, |
| He was president of the | Savannah chapter of the NAACP, where he led his commun |
| The | Savannah Charaxes or Scarce Forest Emperor (Charaxes e |
| The entire route is in | Savannah, Chatham County, Georgia. |
| They are managed by the | Savannah Chatham County Public School System. |
| Savannah Christian Preparatory School (SCPS) is a non- | |
| DeRenne Avenue is the location of | Savannah Christian's second campus. |
| Georgia, played a part in the founding of the | Savannah church by converting some of its early member |
| In 1929 the general aviation committee of the | Savannah City Council recommended that the 730 acre (3 |
| and their two children; Browning Jr. (BJ) and | Savannah Clair. |
| uke Ellington, then with Lucille Dixon at the | Savannah Club in New York City from 1949 to 1953. |
| For more information contact Friends of the | Savannah Coastal Wildlife Refuges at the link below. |
| e is one of seven refuges administered by the | Savannah Coastal Refuges Complex in Savannah, Georgia. |
| rofessor at the California Institute of Arts, | Savannah College of Art and Design, University of Sout |
| Competition for Students Artist sponsored by | Savannah College of Art and Design, he moved to the US |
| e degree in fine art, and then went on to the | Savannah College of Art and Design, where he earned an |
| and Professor of Architectural History at the | Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD). |
| David Jeffreys is a professor of art at | Savannah College of Art and Design. |
| He attended the | Savannah College of Art and Design and received his BF |
| o 1992, he was a professor of Architecture at | Savannah College of Art and Design. |
| trustees of the Woodruff Arts Center and the | Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) formally app |
| tographer and professor of Photography at the | Savannah College of Art and Design. |
| graduating from high school, Les attended the | Savannah College of Art and Design, where he majored i |
| ters Atlanta mansion (1883), Anderson Hall at | Savannah College of Art and Design (1896) and the Pied |
| f Fine Arts in Media and Performing Arts from | Savannah College of Art & Design. |
| st master's degree program was developed at a | Savannah college during his tenure. |
| Lorenc is a lecturer at the | Savannah College of Art and Design in Atlanta. |
| Yardley is a 2001 graduate from the | Savannah College of Art and Design, and he currently l |
| He has been an invited speaker at | Savannah College of Art & Design, the Society of Illus |
| d Graphic Art, the School of Visual Arts, the | Savannah College of Art & Design, Virginia Commonwealt |
| of Foundation and Ceramic Arts courses at the | Savannah College of Art and Design in Savannah, Georgi |
| e College, Middle Tennessee State University, | Savannah College of Art and Design, Strayer University |
| eum of Art was founded in 2002 as part of the | Savannah College of Art and Design in Savannah, Georgi |
| traded partnership with the school before the | Savannah College of Art and Design took control in 200 |
| f Design and his Master of Fine Arts from the | Savannah College of Art and Design in Savannah, Georgi |
| e Atlanta College of Art (BFA, 1989), and the | Savannah College of Art and Design (MFA, computer arts |
| Bachelors degree in Fine Arts (BFA) from the | Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD), then receiv |
| 2011-12 academic year: Davenport University, | Savannah College of Art and Design and Siena Heights U |
| He currently teaches sequential art at the | Savannah College of Art and Design. |
| Savannah College of Art and Design | |
| The | Savannah Colts were a South Atlantic League baseball t |
| 000 Hindus in Atlanta, Augusta, Macon, Perry, | Savannah, Columbus, Rome/Cartersville and other remote |
| Alexa and | Savannah come to heal old wounds and find love again u |
| The 1920s also led to the opening up of the | Savannah Communities to the outside world, via the two |
| a Light on Early African-American History in | Savannah,” CONNECT SAVANNAH News Magazine, May 10, 200 |
| Eland, is a genus of antelopes of the African | savannah, containing two species: the Common Eland and |
| Savannah continued to operate with the 6th Fleet in th | |
| The Signal Service office in | Savannah continued the record of meteorological observ |
| xchange, the Memphis Cotton Exchange, and the | Savannah Cotton Exchange. |
| ver millions of years by the erosive power of | Savannah Creek, which flows north-west, following the |
| turned and the paper was renamed again to The | Savannah Daily Morning News for one edition, then chan |
| It left | Savannah daily at 7 AM for the six-hour run via Macon |
| Statesboro December 3. Siege of | Savannah December 10-21. |
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