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pennine
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Pennine

Pennine may refer to:

  • Pennines, a mountain range in England
  • Pennine Alps, a mountain range in the western Alps
  • Pennine Way, a National Trail in England and Scotland
  • Pennine FM, an Independent Local Radio station in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire

Usage examples of "pennine".

But eventually the procession came up onto the high moorland road that cut through the great Pennine Chain of hills.

Josh gets really narked when Pennine pipers and Lithuanian dancers want to hire it.

The little party clove to the coast as far north as Kendal, then northwestward up the valley of the Eden River, due west over the northern foothills of the Pennine chain, over the ancient Roman Wall, and so into Tynedale, being welcomed at every hall and hamlet they passed.

Kendal, then northwestward up the valley of the Eden River, due west over the northern foothills of the Pennine chain, over the ancient Roman Wall, and so into Tynedale, being welcomed at every hall and hamlet they passed.

And beyond went woods and hills, right away to the pale grey heights of the Pennine Chain.

Faced with disaster after disaster he was Pennine to retreat into inanities.

He seemed impervious to the biting Pennine wind, sticking out his chest and chin while the rest of us huddled pathetically.

There were five of us stood in front of him on the freezing, windswept tor high up on a Pennine fell.

Far behind the line of the Wall there were forts in the Pennines and farther south, from where any barbarian incursion could be countered.

He remembers years and years ago now, when he was still living in Blackpool, crossing the Pennines to the Ilkley Festival.

Edward left Berwick and tried to intercept the Scots on their way home, the Scots had already attacked various localities on their way across the Pennines, but as Edward had chosen the wrong route he missed them completely.

I loaded up the trusty Smith and Kick butt west of the Pennines and rammed it into my shoulder holster.

Maybe, somehow, after my wife and I had fallen asleep, I would awake and taking just my coat and whatever tools were needed, would cross over the Pennines, down into those Yorkshire towns, do my deeds and be back in bed asleep beside my wife before dawn thawed the frost from the cracked window pane.

I cycled along the gravel and dirt to the side of the road as heavily laden thirty wheelers thundered past, heading east into the Pennines, their wash sending me wheeling into the scrubland as if I had been swatted by a giant hand.

He remembers years and years ago now, when he was still living in Blackpool, crossing the Pennines to the Ilkley Festival.