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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Navarrese

Navarrese \Na`var*rese"\ (? or ?), prop. a. Of or pertaining to Navarre. -- n. sing. & pl. A native or inhabitant of Navarre; the people of Navarre.

Usage examples of "navarrese".

English-Welsh-Norman-Breton-Angevin host marched toward Edinburgh, ships were landing parties of crusaders along the east coastdescendants of Vikings from the Kingdom of Denmark-Norway, Goths from Sweden, Frisians and Flemings, Burgundians, French, Leonese, Portuguese, Granadans, fighting men representing most of the small states that made up the Holy Roman Empire, a few Switzers, some Italians of various kinds, Castilians, Navarrese, Moors, and even a few scarred, black-skinned noble knights of the Kingdom of Ghana.

Though you are more protected, it is most likely you would have suffered the same fate as the Navarrese pilgrims.

Vikings from the Kingdom of Denmark-Norway, Goths from Sweden, Frisians and Flemings, Burgundians, French, Leonese, Portuguese, Granadans, fighting men representing most of the small states that made up the Holy Roman Empire, a few Switzers, some Italians of various kinds, Castilians, Navarrese, Moors, and even a few scarred, black-skinned noble knights of the Kingdom of Ghana.

Spanish, a bit Catalan, a bit Basque, a bit Navarrese, and highly anticlerical.

The Navarrese fight under the Sacred Heart but The Lady will see us right.

September, with six Alavese and two Navarrese battalions, he took refuge in France.

The Castilians, the Navarrese, and the Aragonese all rose against them, and everywhere they had to force a passage with their swords.

In passing from village to village long and winding roads must be traversed, the short cuts across the mountains being such as only a goat or a Navarrese can tread.

Captal of Buch, the Navarrese commander, whom Bertrand had years before defeated and captured, bade him keep the prisoner.

It begins at dawn when Jordan, from his sleeping robe, kills the Navarrese cavalryman and the band prepares for a possible assault.

He called him a Gascon devil, disguised as a Viscayan or Navarrese, who getting a smattering of accounts, gave out that he was an accountant, in order to come to give him a beating.

Navarre was negotiating with both sides and was in contact with Navarrese and English forces outside the walls.

Probably at this time Enguerrand de Coucy fell away from the Navarrese party, for he soon afterward appeared in opposition to it.

English and Navarrese than anyone else, for he chased them many times.

His bold capture of a fortress from the Navarrese, witnessed by the Regent, began his prominence in the royal service.