Anagrammeja & Tietoja | englanti sana LASCARS


LASCARS

4

Kirjeiden luku määrä

7

On Palindromi

Ei

18
AR
ARS
AS
ASC
CA
CAR
LA
LAS
RS
SC

237
AA
AAC
AAL
AAR
AAS
AC
ACA

Esimerkkejä LASCARS käyttämisestä lauseessa

  • The number of lascars employed on EIC East Indiamen was so great that the Parliament of England restricted their employment via the Navigation Acts (in force from 1660 onwards) which required that 75% of the crew onboard English-flagged ships importing goods from Asia be English subjects.
  • Until May 1819, in the Madras Army Native Foot Artillery (Golundauze) the Subedars of the lascars (servants or hands, analogous to the matrosses in British artillery) were called Syrang and the Jemadars were designated 1st Tindal (while Havildar ranked as 2nd Tindals), in order to distinguish them from the native officers of native artillerymen.
  • We rowed directly into this bay; and as soon as we had got round the point of an island which lay off the harbour, we discovered all the beach covered with naked savages who were all armed with lances and clubs; and twelve canoes all full of them who, till we had passed them, had lain concealed, immediately rushed out upon me, making a horrid noise: this, you may suppose, alarmed us greatly; and as I had only one European and four black soldiers, besides the four lascars that rowed the boat.
  • On Friday, 13 September 1940 Benares left Liverpool, England, sailing in Convoy OB 213, bound for Montreal, with 408 people — 90 CORB children (ages five to fifteen), their ten escorts (3 men, 7 women), 91 fare-paying passengers (including ten children and forty-three women), 6 convoy representatives, 168 Indian Lascars (the catering crew was from Portuguese Goa) and 43 British crew (including five women).
  • Charles Savage was killed, together with 13 others who included three lascars, who were "Jonow, a lascar boatswain's mate; Hassen, a lascar seamen; Mosden, a lascar seaman;" Dillon and lascar Joe survived the battle.
  • Some of the early Sri Lankans (or Ceylonese) would have come as lascars and like any other of those settled would have likely converted to Christianity if they were to integrate well.
  • Sirène had as prisoners Captain Haggy, Calcuttas master, her first and second mates, and 50 of her lascars and seamen.
  • Some of these women still engaged in prostitution with multiple other Chinese men even after they formed a relationship with a single Chinese man, these women were proud of being wives of the Chinese and their well-maintained houses, saying they were 'clean and tidy' and the commissioners even said they were 'clean and even tastefully furnished', and Ellen B said 'You always see all the Chinese women's houses clean and comfortable', 'always plenty to eat and drink' and Minnie said she was 'living respectably with a Chinaman', the women also viewed non-white men of different races in a different light, saying that the 'dark' men like Lascars were different from the Chinese and Ellen B said 'there is not a girl with the Chinese that cares about a dark fellow.
  • Other works of Rahman include: The Integration of the Hijab into Police Uniforms, The Lascar (radio play), and short stories and articles: Currying Favour, Backbone of the Fleet, The Life of Lascars Aboard Merchant Ships, Cambridge's first Gurdwara, Bangladeshis Trade Curry for College and Taxis, Baishaki Mela, Asian Women Suffragettes in the 1900s, Travel with Kids, The Middle Child Syndrome and Noor Inayat Khan.
  • In Melbourne the crew, described as Lascars, deserted the ship, complaining of being ill-treated and underfed.
  • Salter was the missionary at the Strangers' Home for Asiatics, Africans and South Sea Islanders (opened 1857), Limehouse, on behalf of London City Mission where he gained experience of working with lascars and taught himself several Indian languages.
  • The Strangers' Home for Asiatics, Africans and South Sea Islanders (opened 1857) was a residential home in West India Dock Road, in the Limehouse district of London, that provided accommodation for Asian and black sailors (lascars), acted as a "repatriation centre" and was a platform for Christian missionary activity.
  • Sirène, captained by Citoyen Reignaud, had as prisoners Captain Haggy, Calcuttas master, her first and second mates, and 50 of her lascars and seamen.
  • It was awarded to native Indian members of the HEIC forces: in gold to more senior native officers including Subedars; in silver to junior officers including Jemadars and Serangs; with NCOs and Sepoys, including Havildars, Naiks, Tindals and Lascars receiving a smaller silver medal.
  • Sirène had as prisoners Captain Haggy, Calcuttas master, her first and second mates, and 50 of her lascars and seamen.
  • Sirène had as prisoners Captain Haggy, Calcuttas master, her first and second mates, and 50 of her lascars and seamen.



Etsi LASCARS:






Sivun valmistelu kesti: 500,21 ms.