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Project Gutenberg (PG) is a volunteer effort to digitize and archive cultural works, to encourage the creation and distribution of eBooks. It was founded in 1971 by Michael S. Hart and is the oldest digital library. Most of the items in its collection are the full texts of public domain books. The ...
Yeomen of the royal guard, whose institution dates from the reign of Henry VII., and whose office it is to wait upon royalty on high occasions; the name is also given to the warders of the Tower, though they are a separate body and of more recent origin; the name simply means (royal) dependant, a corruption of the French word buffetier, one who attends the sideboard.
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Small stone structures, of ancient date, remains of which are found (sometimes in clusters) in Ireland and the W. of Scotland, with a conical roof formed of stones overlapping one another, undressed and without mortar; some of them appear to have been monks' cells.
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The god of flies, protector against them, worshipped by the Phoenicians; as being a heathen deity, transformed by the Jews into a chief of the devils; sometimes identified with Satan, and sometimes his aide-de-camp.
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A village in the S. of Canaan, and the most southerly, 27 m. from Hebron; associated with Dan, in the N., to denote the limit of the land and what lies between; lies in a pastoral country abounding in wells, and is frequently mentioned in patriarchal history; means "the Well of the Oath."
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A gauze-like film which forms on the sides of a bottle of good port.
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An Italian female Santa Claus, who on Twelfth Night fills the stockings of good children with good things, and those of bad with ashes.
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A religious order that arose in Belgium in the 13th century, connected with the Beguins, a mystic and socialistic sect.
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A sisterhood confined now to France and Germany, who, without taking any monastic vow, devote themselves to works of piety and benevolence.
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Name given in the E. Indies to a princess, mother, sister, or wife of a native ruler.
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A province of Bengal, in the valley of the Ganges, which divides it into two; densely peopled; cradle of Buddhism.
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