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Перевод: forester
[прилагательное] лесничий; [существительное] лесник ; лесничий ; обитатель лесов
Тезаурус:
- It is with this basic contradiction that Forester avoided sentimentality.
- Each riding forester had under him two or three walking foresters, who made annual payments to him equal to the amount of the farm which he paid to the warden.
- He had been discovered by the abbess's steward, Richard of Bernstead, who, when he resisted attachment, seized and bound him, took him to Barking, imprisoned him for three days and afterwards delivered him to the forester and the verderer.
- Land-use patterns are an expression of deep political, economic and cultural structures; they do not change overnight when a ecologist or forester sounds the alarm that a country is losing its resource base.
- At the Gloucester Forest Eyre of 1282 the judges ruled that every forester of fee was to have his own roll of attachments of vert and venison to present before them.
- "Forester.
- Some foresters of fee, however, paid no farm: Henry son of Aucher, forester of fee of Waltham in the forest of Essex, was in 1292 bound only to make "wanlace" - that is, bring the quarry to bay, whenever the king came to hunt in his bailiwick.
- Just as informally, William the Conqueror once confirmed a grant "while sitting on his carpet between the church and the forester's house."
- In another instance a man who was recorded as Laurencio Forester in 1332, and his son as Willelmo de Fortereshaye, was himself recorded both in earlier and later documents as Laurence de Forstereshegh.
- Her name is Millie Forester.
- In 1836 a Professor James Forbes made the first recorded ascent of Sgurr nan Gillean with Duncan MacIntyre, a local forester, as guide.
- The judgment of the court was that because Richard was not a sworn forester, he was liable to amercement.
- Foresters of fee usually paid a farm to the warden of the forest: Hugh of Stratford, forester of fee of Wakefield in Northamptonshire, paid to John de Neville, warden of the forests between Oxford and Stamford bridges, 1234-;1244, as a farm for the aforesaid bailiwick, 2 marks a year and two quarters of nuts
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