Find link
language:
af: Afrikaans
als: Alemannisch
[Alemannic]
am: አማርኛ
[Amharic]
an: aragonés
[Aragonese]
ar: العربية
[Arabic]
arz: مصرى
[Egyptian Arabic]
as: অসমীয়া
[Assamese]
ast: asturianu
[Asturian]
az: azərbaycanca
[Azerbaijani]
azb: تۆرکجه
[Southern Azerbaijani]
ba: башҡортса
[Bashkir]
bar: Boarisch
[Bavarian]
bat-smg: žemaitėška
[Samogitian]
be: беларуская
[Belarusian]
be-tarask: беларуская (тарашкевіца)
[Belarusian (Taraškievica)]
bg: български
[Bulgarian]
bn: বাংলা
[Bengali]
bpy: বিষ্ণুপ্রিয়া মণিপুরী
[Bishnupriya Manipuri]
br: brezhoneg
[Breton]
bs: bosanski
[Bosnian]
bug: ᨅᨔ ᨕᨘᨁᨗ
[Buginese]
ca: català
[Catalan]
ce: нохчийн
[Chechen]
ceb: Cebuano
ckb: کوردیی ناوەندی
[Kurdish (Sorani)]
cs: čeština
[Czech]
cv: Чӑвашла
[Chuvash]
cy: Cymraeg
[Welsh]
da: dansk
[Danish]
de: Deutsch
[German]
el: Ελληνικά
[Greek]
en: English
eo: Esperanto
es: español
[Spanish]
et: eesti
[Estonian]
eu: euskara
[Basque]
fa: فارسی
[Persian]
fi: suomi
[Finnish]
fo: føroyskt
[Faroese]
fr: français
[French]
fy: Frysk
[West Frisian]
ga: Gaeilge
[Irish]
gd: Gàidhlig
[Scottish Gaelic]
gl: galego
[Galician]
gu: ગુજરાતી
[Gujarati]
he: עברית
[Hebrew]
hi: हिन्दी
[Hindi]
hr: hrvatski
[Croatian]
hsb: hornjoserbsce
[Upper Sorbian]
ht: Kreyòl ayisyen
[Haitian]
hu: magyar
[Hungarian]
hy: Հայերեն
[Armenian]
ia: interlingua
[Interlingua]
id: Bahasa Indonesia
[Indonesian]
io: Ido
is: íslenska
[Icelandic]
it: italiano
[Italian]
ja: 日本語
[Japanese]
jv: Basa Jawa
[Javanese]
ka: ქართული
[Georgian]
kk: қазақша
[Kazakh]
kn: ಕನ್ನಡ
[Kannada]
ko: 한국어
[Korean]
ku: Kurdî
[Kurdish (Kurmanji)]
ky: Кыргызча
[Kirghiz]
la: Latina
[Latin]
lb: Lëtzebuergesch
[Luxembourgish]
li: Limburgs
[Limburgish]
lmo: lumbaart
[Lombard]
lt: lietuvių
[Lithuanian]
lv: latviešu
[Latvian]
map-bms: Basa Banyumasan
[Banyumasan]
mg: Malagasy
min: Baso Minangkabau
[Minangkabau]
mk: македонски
[Macedonian]
ml: മലയാളം
[Malayalam]
mn: монгол
[Mongolian]
mr: मराठी
[Marathi]
mrj: кырык мары
[Hill Mari]
ms: Bahasa Melayu
[Malay]
my: မြန်မာဘာသာ
[Burmese]
mzn: مازِرونی
[Mazandarani]
nah: Nāhuatl
[Nahuatl]
nap: Napulitano
[Neapolitan]
nds: Plattdüütsch
[Low Saxon]
ne: नेपाली
[Nepali]
new: नेपाल भाषा
[Newar]
nl: Nederlands
[Dutch]
nn: norsk nynorsk
[Norwegian (Nynorsk)]
no: norsk bokmål
[Norwegian (Bokmål)]
oc: occitan
[Occitan]
or: ଓଡ଼ିଆ
[Oriya]
os: Ирон
[Ossetian]
pa: ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
[Eastern Punjabi]
pl: polski
[Polish]
pms: Piemontèis
[Piedmontese]
pnb: پنجابی
[Western Punjabi]
pt: português
[Portuguese]
qu: Runa Simi
[Quechua]
ro: română
[Romanian]
ru: русский
[Russian]
sa: संस्कृतम्
[Sanskrit]
sah: саха тыла
[Sakha]
scn: sicilianu
[Sicilian]
sco: Scots
sh: srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски
[Serbo-Croatian]
si: සිංහල
[Sinhalese]
simple: Simple English
sk: slovenčina
[Slovak]
sl: slovenščina
[Slovenian]
sq: shqip
[Albanian]
sr: српски / srpski
[Serbian]
su: Basa Sunda
[Sundanese]
sv: svenska
[Swedish]
sw: Kiswahili
[Swahili]
ta: தமிழ்
[Tamil]
te: తెలుగు
[Telugu]
tg: тоҷикӣ
[Tajik]
th: ไทย
[Thai]
tl: Tagalog
tr: Türkçe
[Turkish]
tt: татарча/tatarça
[Tatar]
uk: українська
[Ukrainian]
ur: اردو
[Urdu]
uz: oʻzbekcha/ўзбекча
[Uzbek]
vec: vèneto
[Venetian]
vi: Tiếng Việt
[Vietnamese]
vo: Volapük
wa: walon
[Walloon]
war: Winaray
[Waray]
yi: ייִדיש
[Yiddish]
yo: Yorùbá
[Yoruba]
zh: 中文
[Chinese]
zh-min-nan: Bân-lâm-gú
[Min Nan]
zh-yue: 粵語
[Cantonese]
jump to random article
Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for James Laurenson 11 found (136 total)
alternate case: james Laurenson
Richard Laurenson
(304 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Richard Philip James Laurenson (born 4 July 1968) is a New Zealand priest of the Catholic Church who has served as the fourth bishop of the Diocese of
Number 10 (drama series)
(564 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
.... Gina McKee Frank ...... Anthony O'Donnell Lord Cairns ...... James Laurenson Nigel Ogden ...... Christopher Ettridge Rebecca ...... Flora Montgomery
1913 Lyttelton by-election
(113 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
James McCombs 2,075 42.20 Reform Malcolm Miller 1,560 31.73 Liberal James Laurenson 922 18.75 Independent Liberal Henry Thacker 263 5.35 Independent William
New Zealand Championships
(1,040 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
1919 Geoff Ollivier James Laurenson 6-2, 1-6, 6-0, 7-5 1920 Bill Tilden Watson Washburn 6-0, 6-1, 4-6, 4-6, 6-3 1921 James Laurenson Edgar Bartleet 6-2
1980 Birthday Honours (New Zealand)
(1,549 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
Gay JP – of Hamilton. Norman George Goffin – of Lower Hutt. Russell James Laurenson JP – of Lower Hutt. Noeline Mary McIlroy – of Christchurch. Peter Leonard
1995 New Year Honours (New Zealand)
(1,398 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
Aline Gordon – of Levin. John Alwin Hateley – of Wellington. Ewen James Laurenson – of Wellington. Gillian Rose Laurenson – of Wellington. Nellie Doreen
Moonfleet (novel)
(1,816 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
Richard Pearce as John Trenchard, along with Robert Glenister and James Laurenson . The Colonial Radio Theatre on the Air released a 300-minute production
Lyttelton (New Zealand electorate)
(1,727 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
James McCombs 2,075 42.20 Reform Malcolm Miller 1,560 31.73 Liberal James Laurenson 922 18.75 Independent Liberal Henry Thacker 263 5.35 Independent William
United Nations Memorial Cemetery
(4,028 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Colombia 2023-11-11 23 Jorge Sánchez Tapia Colombia 2023-11-11 24 Bryan James Laurenson United Kingdom 2023-11-11 25 Brian Wood United Kingdom 2023-11-11 26
Geoff Ollivier
(635 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
final in four sets. In 1919, Ollivier took his third title beating James Laurenson in the final in four sets. He won his fourth title in 1922, after playing
Flag of the United Tribes of New Zealand
(2,765 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Southern Cross, but 20th-century historian and New Zealand flag scholar James Laurenson argues they are stars of England, religious symbols with roots in British