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Sheering Village has about 350 households.
The teeth of the bat-eared fox are much smaller and reduced in sheering surface formation than teeth of other canid species.
Hastingwood, Matching & Sheering Village (1 seat)
Cogner Town, two years ago called Sheering, had a small Fortune House that Justin Sharp had approved as safe.
The mazework of creaking rigging held the eye, bewildering it, as wheeling seabirds called out over the sheering of the barque's bow wave.
The village of Matching is on undulating land is separated from the Stort valley by the parishes of Harlow and Sheering.
Hastingwood, Matching and Sheering Village; and Lower Sheering.
The village of Lower Sheering in Essex adjoins Sawbridgeworth, east of the railway station, along the Hertfordshire - Essex border.
They were off, weaving slightly, weaving more than slightly, foolishly moving at different speeds, coming perilously close to each other before sheering off - and I began to realize things.
With the neighbouring village of Lower Sheering it forms the civil parish of Sheering, part of Epping Forest District.
Since the 1980s, Harris has owned a Grade II listed building in Sheering Essex, in the grounds of which he built his own recording and editing studio, "Barnyard".
Robert Halfon (Conservative) - Harlow constituency, which includes the areas around Roydon and Lower Nazeing to the west of Harlow, and Sheering, Matching and Hastingwood to the east.
Top of Car Collapsed The top of the last car, according to many, collapsed on top of those in the cabin and the sheering of the side of the car extended from the front to about the middle.
Springbuck turned from his second adversary after sheering through passegarde, pauldron and shoulder, just in time to see Bulf go against the commander of the enemy troops, an accomplished fighter who wore armor of ancient design that he considered a bringer of good luck in war.
The Goschen Baronetcy, of Durrington House in the Parish of Sheering and County of Essex, was created in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom on 27 June 1927 for the businessman Sir Harry Goschen.
The dominant features of this landscape are "peak and saddle" topography, "razor ridges" (narrow ridges, often less than ten feet wide, which fall off at near ninety-degree angles on either side for 60 feet or more), and "cat-step" terraces (caused by the constant slumping and vertical sheering of the loess soil).