Synonyms that are in the dictionary are marked in green. Synonyms that are not in the dictionary are marked in red.
Antonyms that are in the dictionary are marked in green. Antonyms that are not in the dictionary are marked in red.
Adds Sue Deeks, head of program acquisition for the BBC: “In the U.K. we learn about William the Conqueror, the Battle of Hastings and King Harold’s gruesome death in our school history lessons – but those headlines are all most of us can remember.
Source: https://tvline.com/news/nikolaj-coster-waldau-king-and-conqueror-bbc-cast-1235089919/
It was there that they found the coin came from the time of William the Conqueror and was likely dropped by a worker on the Fosse Way.
Source: https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1834531/william-the-conqueror-5p-coin
The famous Domesday Book – a land survey commissioned by William the Conqueror and completed in 1086 – shows Nottinghamshire names which have been modernised, but otherwise changed very little in all that time.
The ghost of Lady de Bevere is the spirit here; the castle was given to her husband Drogo by William the Conqueror.
Source: https://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/news/history/map-reveals-most-haunted-places-8859770
With oil’s might at his fingertips, Excellency Ali should have the majestic presence of William the Conqueror, yet his bearing and expressions are that of William the Silent, of a man who lives with the dread of dark secrets.